oy 


oderh schools, constituting the eollection 
Po by Mr, Nicholas M. Matthews, of 
} coer Md., were placed on view yes- 
in ‘the American Art Galleries, No. 
Square South, preparatory to 
a, are dn next Tuesday and Wednes- 


day evenings in the Plaza Hotel, The col-| 

lection, while it contains ho paintings of 
the fitst importance, is of uniformly high 

f uvality, 

| Perhaps the most interesting is Franz 

| Snyders’ “Dogs Attacking a Stag,” a large 

; showing eight dogs which have 

d upon a stag. The staf has caught: 
eye his antlers and tossed it over 

, but the others are pressing 

i This ani- 

nat _bainting was once in the collection 

of . Bonaparte, King of Naples and. 
Te. and was presented to Jerome 
l aS a Wedding sift. It formerly 

ih the Netional Gallery, of Madrid. 

: 1 geet important work by Snyders, 
Was a contemporary of Rubens, is 
King Is Dead—Long Live the King!” 

F a humorous bird picture, showing the stout 
| yrown stump of a blasted tree around 

'. which are gathered the birds of the ground 

‘the birds of the air, their beaks open, | 

he oY chattering to the top of their: 

Ahothet notable work is Jordaens’) 

i i earirait Group—the Stoic. and the Epi- 

| eure,” whith is somewhat similar to “The 

! Philosophers, ” 4 work by the same artist 

in the Metropolitan Museum of Art. 

ua the older works especial interest at- 

' taches to “Portrait of the Artist’s Fa- 

| ther”? by Teniers the Younger; “Portrait 

ef a Lady” by Netccher; “The Conflagra- 
| tion,” a furid picture- by Vanderpoel; 

Birds and Fowl” by Hondecdeter; “‘The 
Market Vendor’ by Ribera; ‘‘Bird’s- Hye 

| View in Holland’ by De Koninck, and 

| two fine Venetian scenes by Caneletto. 

q 


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perenne re nner ner ee 


| One of the most beautiful works is 

| “Landscape with Figures’ by Paul Bril, 

A Seventeenth century Flemish painter, 

_whieh evidently ae the carton for a 

| tapestry. 

_ -Among the American paintings chief 
interest attaches to’ “The Juniata River 
Near Harrisburg, Pa.,” by George Innéss, 
one of the artist’s earliest works, signed 

‘Jn mohograni on a@ tree and dated 1856. 

| It was painted to order for the late Au- 
| Bustus Albert, of Baltimore. 


A “Still Life and pied) antes bi 


Jan Weenijx, Sold for $1,140. — 
ig sale gfvsthe collection 
of Nich M. Matthews: 
e, under tie auspices of the 
merican Art Assodiation, at the Plaza. 
Hotel last evenin ought $14,330, mak- 
ing a total Of ABST, ,490. °A ‘Still Life 
and Landscap by: Jan Weenix, fruit 
flowets, ttle dog and a squirrel 
\ with landscape in the backgrownd, a 
large painting 58 by 31, for which Mr. 
|Matthews had been offered $3,000 at 
different times, went to Bernet, MEOH, 
for, $1,140. 

“The King ‘Is Dead,” \Long Live the 


King,” an interesting picture by Frans 
Snyders of a bird conclave with a tiny 
owl presiding and a few domestic fowls 
jtaking part, went to a buyer giving the 
name of Mori for $650. Another picture 
iby Snyders, “‘ Dogs Attacking a Stag,” 
iene to Stillwager. for $500, the first 


wy * Landscape and Old. White Horse,” 
signed by the artist: with the. date, 1640, 
{went to Philip J. Brett for $260. Aart 
| Van Der Neer’s “‘ River Scene in Moon- 
light ” went to Bohler & Steinmeyer for 
\$400, and the charming little picture by 
|\Hglon Hendrik Van Der Neer, .“ Por- 
[trait of a Young Lady at Her Toilet,”) 
‘a pretty, fair young woman, with 2: 
lround but delicate face, wearing a cap, 
‘sitting before a mirror, went to IKnoed- 
‘ler & Co. for $650. The chair in the’ 
|picture, a bright red, made a pretty 
itouch of color. ‘ 

Poelenburg’s ‘‘ Diana, Calypso and 
Others’’ went to F. HB. Claiborn for $300. 
|Netscher’s ‘‘ Portrait of a Lady’ went 
ito Williams for $900. “A Basket of 
| Flowers,’ by Justus Van Huysum, went 
‘to Bernet, agent, for $400, and another 
“Basket of Flowers,” by Jan Van Huy= 
\sum, which cost $1,000 in Amsterdam, in 
\1842, went to Chester for $350. Ferdi-, 
inand Bol’s.‘‘ Portrait of a Lady,” went) 
{to Wilhams for #300, and a, Kitchen 
Interior,” by. Zorg, went to the same 
ibuyer for $430. ‘ 
| A-nice littl portrait by Pierre Mig- 
jnard, surrounded by blossoms by Segh- 
ers, went to Beck for $110. 


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A | | 
ait Cox 
ON FREE PUBLIC VIEW 
FROM 9 A.M. UNTIL 6 P.M. } )3/ 


AT THE AMERICAN ART GALLERIES 


MADISON SQUARE SOUTH, NEW YORK 


- FROM 
“~ —_—-auRSDAY, FEBRUARY 12TH (LINCOLN’s BIRTHDAY), 1914 
~) UNTIL THE MORNING OF THE DATE OF SALE 


) 
~) —_ 


THE COLLECTION 


OF 
VALUABLE PAINTINGS 


FORMED BY 


MR. NICHOLAS M. MATTHEWS 


OF BALTIMORE 


TO BE SOLD 
AT UNRESTRICTED PUBLIC SALE 
IN THE GRAND BALLROOM OF 
THE PLAZA 


FIFTH AVENUE, 58TH TO 59TH STREET 


ON TUESDAY AND WEDNESDAY EVENINGS 
FEBRUARY 17TH AND 18ru, 1914 
BEGINNING EACH EVENING AT 8.15 0’CLOCK 


No. 134. “THE KING IS DEAD—LONG LIVE THE KING!” 
~ By Frans Snypers. 


w/ 4 
ILLUSTRATED CATALOGUE 


OF THE 


VALUABLE PAINTINGS 


BY 


THE GREAT AND LITTLE MASTERS 
OF THE 
OLD AND MODERN SCHOOLS 


FORMED BY 


MR. NICHOLAS M. MATTHEWS 


OF BALTIMORE 


TO BE SOLD 
AT UNRESTRICTED PUBLIC SALE 


IN THE GRAND BALLROOM 


OF 


Pie PLAZA 


FIFTH AVENUE, 58th TO 59th STREET 


ON THE EVENINGS HEREIN STATED 


THE SALE WILL BE CONDUCTED BY 
MR. THOMAS E. KIRBY 
OF THE 
AMERICAN ART ASSOCIATION, MANAGERS 
MADISON SQUARE SOUTH 
NEW YORK 
1914 


CONDITIONS OF SALE 


1. Any bid which is merely a nominal or fractional advance 
may be rejected by the auctioneer, if, in his judgment, such bid 
would be likely to affect the sale injuriously. 

- 2. The highest bidder shall be the buyer, and if any dispute 
arise between two or more bidders, the auctioneer shall either de- 
cide the same or put up for re-sale the lot so in dispute. 

3. Payment shall be made of all or such part of the purchase 
money as may be required, and the names and addresses of the 
purchasers shall be given immediately on the sale of every lot, in 
default of which the lot so purchased shall be immediately put up 
again and re-sold. 

Payment of that part of the purchase money not made at the 
time of sale shall be made within ten days thereafter, in default of 
which the undersigned may either continue to hold the lots at the 
risk of the purchaser and take such action as may be necessary 
for the enforcement of the sale, or may at public or private sale, 
and without other than this notice, re-sell the lots for the benefit 
of such purchaser, and the deficiency (if any) arising from such 
re-sale shall be a charge against such purchaser. 

‘4. Delivery of any purchase will be made only upon pay- 
ment of the total amount due for all purchases at the sale. 

Deliveries will be made on sales days between the hours of 9 
A. M. and 1 P. M., and on other days—except holidays—be- 
tween the hours of 9 A. M. and 5 P. M. 

Delivery of any purchase will be made only at the American 
Art Galleries, or other place of sale, as the case may be, and 
only on presenting the bill of purchase. 

Delivery may be made, at the discretion of the Association, 
of any purchase during the session of the sale at which it was sold. 

5. Shipping, boxing or wrapping of purchases is a business 
in which the Association is in no wise engaged, and will not be 
performed by the Association for purchasers. The Association 
will, however, afford to purchasers every facility for employing at 
current and reasonable rates carriers and packers; doing so, how- 
ever, without any assumption of responsibility on its part for the 
acts and charges of the parties engaged for such service. 

6. Storage of any purchase shall be at the sole risk of the 
purchaser. Title passes upon the fall of the auctioneer’s hammer, 
and thereafter, while the Association will exercise due caution in 
caring for and delivering such purchase, it will not hold itself 
responsible if such purchase be lost, stolen, damaged or destroyed. 


Storage charges will be made upon all purchases not removed 
within ten days from the date of the sale thereof. 

7%. Guarantee is not made either by the owner or the Asso- 
ciation of the correctness of the description, genuineness or au- 
thenticity of any lot, and no sale will be set aside on account of 
any incorrectness, error of cataloguing, or any imperfection not 
noted. Every lot is on public exhibition one or more days prior 
to its sale, after which it is sold “as is” and without recourse. 

The Association exercises great care to catalogue every lot 
correctly, and will give consideration to the opinion of any trust- 
worthy expert to the effect that any lot has been incorrectly 
catalogued, and, in its judgment, may either sell the lot as cata- 
logued or make mention of the opinion of such expert, who thereby 
would become responsible for such damage as might result were 
his opinion without proper foundation. 


SPECIAL NOTICE 

Buying or bidding by the Association for responsible parties 
on orders transmitted to it by mail, telegraph or telephone, will 
be faithfully attended to without charge or commission. Any 
purchase so made will be subject to the above Conditions of Sale, 
which cannot in any manner be modified. The Association, how- 
ever, in the event of making a purchase of a lot consisting of 
one or more books for a purchaser who has not, through himself 
or his agent, been present at the exhibition or sale, will permit 
such lot to be returned within ten days from the date of sale, 
and the purchase money will be returned, if the lot in any 
material manner differs from its catalogue description. 

Orders for execution by the Association should be written 
and given with such plainness as to leave no room for misunder- 
standing. Not only should the lot number be given, but also the 
title, and bids should be stated to be so much for the lot, and 
when the lot consists of one or more volumes of books or objects 
of art, the bid per volume or piece should also be stated. If the 
one transmitting the order is unknown to the Association, a de- 
posit should be sent or reference submitted. Shipping directions 
should also be given. 

Priced copies of the catalogue of any sale, or any session 
thereof, will be furnished by the Association at a reasonable 
charge. 

AMERICAN ART ASSOCIATION, 
American Art Galleries, 
Madison Square South, 
New York City. 


FIRST EVENING’S SALE 
TUESDAY, FEBRUARY 17, 1914 
IN THE GRAND BALLROOM OF THE PLAZA 


BEGINNING AT 8.15 o’cLOcK 


No. 1 
J. DEARMAN 


ENGLISH 


(Exhibited at the Royal Academy, 1842 to 1856. Died 1856.) 


RURAL LANDSCAPE 


ps. oe S Walleains 


Height, 5 inches; length, 7 inches 


In a land of rolling hills and sunny green valleys a 
humble farm center is seen on a lazy late-summer day, 
when the trees have begun to drop some of their leaves, 
grass is yellow, and other leaves are turning brown. 
In the middle distance, nestling in a broad hollow, is a 
gray cottage with brown thatch roof, and near it are 
low barns and outbuildings whose ancient thatch is 
mingled with green mossy growths. On a knoll in the 
foreground, in the shelter of two venerable oaks, a 
country maid in a blue skirt and red waist is milking 
a white cow, while a dun cow and a white cow with 
black head and spots lie lazily by on the carpet of 
leaves. 
On the back, under seal, is the following writing: 


“This picture is by Dearman, an English artist of high repute. 
It is a beautiful little picture, and was presented to me by Mr. 
L. Warrington Gillet, Aug. 30, 1845. 

(Signed) “Brantz Mayer, Balto., 5th June, 1853.” 


From the Brantz Mayer Collection, Baltimore. 


No. 2 


ARTHUR QUARTLEY 


AMERICAN: 1839—1886 : 
HO4 LANDSCAPE 4. Gi 


Height, 41%, inches; length, 71, inches 


Hicuuanps rise boldly on either side of a broad valley 
which winds irregularly between them. In-the distance 
the face of those on the far side is obscure, in shadow, 
while the sunlight, striking down forward of them, il- 
luminates a silvery-gray river which threads the valley, 
its distant surface seen through a light haze. The 
beholder looks from a high and narrow foreground, 
where trees and rocks show autumn hues; the sky afar 


also reveals colors in its streaks of cloud. 


Signed at the lower left, A.Q., in monogram. 


No. 3 


WILLIAM M. HARNETT 


AMERICAN: 1851— 


SMOKERS DEN 


/007 (Panel) LM ela 


Height, 634, inches; length, 9 inches 


A patntine of still life. A brown table or bench stands 
in the light in a room with dark walls. On it are 
placed in careless confusion a half dozen or more ob- 
jects of different character and varying surfaces. <A 
tall gray stone beer pitcher or wine jug, painted in 
blue, stands between some biscuit and a well-browned 
meerschaum pipe, behind which a blue open box con- 
tains -pipe-tobacco, and nearby are large leather-bound 


books, and a candle in a silver or pewter stick. 


Signed at the lower right: Wm. M. Harnett. 


No. 4 


JOHN CONSTABLE, R.A. 


EncusH: 1776—1837 


NORFOLK LANDSCAPE 


ee) Whi Mdlawo 


Height, 434 inches; length, 7 inches 


A BROWN-SANDY road with red-sandy outcroppings in 
its bed and banks runs between low banks at right and 
left which have been cut into to reduce its grade as it 
comes up over a low hill. At the top of the bank on 
the left a fence is glimpsed between tall trees that line 
the roadside. Looking down the road, there is revealed 
in the middle distance a cluster of white cottages with 
red chimneys and thatched roofs, among tall green trees, 
and in the distance a range of high hills rises against 
the horizon. Coming up the incline of the road is a 


laden farm wagon drawn by two horses. 


On the back is the following certificate: 


“French Gallery 
“120 Pall Mall, London, August, 1895. 

“ “Norfolk Landscape’ (cottages, sandy road and wagon), size 
6%, in. x 4% in., from the collection of Miss Isabel Constable, 
we guarantee to be a genuine work by John Constable, R.A. 

(Signed) “Waris & Son.” 


From Wallis & Son, London. 


No. 5 


ADELAIDE DIETRICH 


yd OO qT Con TEMPORARY L2 Ny 


STILL LIFE—FLOWERS 


Height, 7 inches; width, 6 inches 


Morninc-ctortes, wild roses, daisies and many flowers 
of the garden and field are heaped high and overflowing 
in and about a capacious basket which has been set 
down upon a stone wall. At one side a tree is growing, 
below the fence-top ferns appear in the shade, and be- 
yond the wall, in which is an arched passage for a 


stream, are seen trees and a rounded hill. 


Signed on the edge of the marble slab. 


On the back of the canvas is the artist’s 
name and the date 1857. 


No. 6 


FELIX ZIEM 


FreNcH: 1821—1905 


/$0 9 VENICE ‘a 


(Penal) = nee Wilbantto 


Height, 5% inches; length, 9 inches 


Tue point of view is taken on the Riva degli Schiavoni, 
looking up across the Molo, past the statue-surmounted 
columns of St. Theodore and the Winged Lion of St. 
Mark to the Old Library and the Royal Palace, with 
many people in brightly-colored apparel seen on the 
sidewalks. On the right is the long facade of the 
Ducal Palace, with a corner of the Prigioni coming into 
the picture nearer by; and across the blue-green Grand 
Canal on the left are seen the Salute and the Dogana, 


with a red-hulled iron steamer anchored in the ‘canal. 


Signed at the lower right: Ziem. 


Purchased from Edward Brandus. 


eee 


No. 7 


FERDINAND CHAIGNEAU 


Frencu: 1830— 


SHEEP AND SHEPHERD 


/00 - em) — AU, Niels 


Height, 81% inches; width, 61 inches 


A Fiat plain of the artist’s favorite Barbizon country 
is represented, bordered on the left by thick trees. Far 
in the distance low blue hills appear along the horizon, 
under a sky whose multitudinous gray and white clouds 
are tinted in mauve and yellow at a subdued sunset’s ap- 
proach. Over the level green meadow along the trees a 
flock of sheep, approaching, have reached the fore- 
ground. A shepherdess accompanies them; her dog, 
which has run ahead, has stopped and turned to see that 


all is well. 


Signed at the lower right: F. Chaigneau. 


No. 8 


WILLEM MARIS 


DvutcuH: 1844—1910 


J//0 7 7 CHICKENS 


ema Chhel 


Height, 7 inches; length, 1014 inches 


A HANDSOME game rooster and eight various hens are 
seen about a straw pile in a barnyard. The barn, with 
gray, brown and green boards, is in the background, 
with a thickly-branching tree beside it, and both throw 
shadows forward which screen a part of the straw pile 
but leave parts of it in the sun; and a distant sunny 
field is visible on the right. The rooster is lying down, 
as are some of the hens, while others strut about or 
peck in the straw. They are white and black; yellow, 
brown and gray. 


Signed at the lower right. 


Ob, 


No. 9 


BAREND CORNELIS KOEKKOEK 


Dutcu: 1803—1862 
SKATING IN HOLLAND 
(Panel) 4. Hb. 77 


Height, 8 inches; length, 11 inches 


A. RIVER, broad and shallow, has frozen over, and its 
glistening surface, a cold grayish-blue in the crisp 
winter air, reflects the shadows of numerous skaters and 
others who are enjoying themselves late in the day, when 
horizon clouds are purpling. The river extends straight 
before the eye, trending somewhat to the left. On the 
right are low Dutch houses with steep gable roofs, and 
near them a tent has been set up on the ice, while 
farther down may be seen the spires and taller build- 
ings of a town, and on the opposite side of the river 
a windmill rises against the western horizon, the air 
in the distance lightly clouding in a mist. Skaters are 
moving up and down the ice-field, a man is pushing a 
large sleigh containing two women, and another man ap- 
proaches them who has shot a duck which swings over 


his shoulder. 


Signed at the lower right: B. C. Koekkoek, 1850. 


No. 10 


N. V. DIAZ DE LA PENA 


FrencuH: 1808—1876 


POOL AND LANDSCAPE 


S45 em i) 


Height, 6 inches; length, 9 inches 


A LANDSCAPE at the forest’s edge, the foreground in 
shadow, a bright green field seen in the sunshine in the 
distance. In the sheltered foreground a pool is cradled 
in green grasses and the brown surface growths of a 
woodland purlieus, and its quiet water reflects a light 
gray summer sky which preserves only suggestions of 
the blue. On the right, tall and ancient trees of Fon- 
tainebleau are clustered, while on the left detached trees 
partly screen the great Barbizon plain country beyond. 
Seated on the ground near the pond are two figures, in 


red, blue and white. 


Signed at the lower left: N. Daz. 


No. 11 


JOHN FREDERICK HERRING 


EncuisH: 17 95—1865 


A GROUP OF ANIMALS 
J/AO- 


Height, 8 inches; length, 12 inches 


STaBxe buildings or shelters with thatch or husk roofs 
are near together about a farmyard whose herbage is 
a yellow-green or greenish-yellow in the sunshine of a 
warm summer day, under a bright blue sky with mounds 
of gray-blue and white cumuli. No distance save the 
sky is seen, except for a glimpse between a horse’s nose 
and a building, the yard being occupied by five horses 
—hbay, dark chestnut, brown and dapple-grays—while 
in the foreground are black and red pigs and some 


chickens, among them a game rooster and hen. 


Signed at the lower right: J. F. Herrre. 


ASG 


No. 12 


R. S. ZIMMERMAN 


Con TEMPORARY Loo Oe ae 
e 


THE PHILOSOPHER—A PORTRAIT 
Height, 91, inches; width, 7 inches 


Hatr-LenctH portrait of a venerable man of large 


_ frame and massive head, with a mass of gray hair and 


a straight line of short gray side-whiskers. His face 
is seamed and the heavy lower lip sags. He is facing 
the left in a strong light and has pushed his glasses 
up to his forehead while he reads intently a manuscript 
which he holds well up. His coat is black and he wears 


a stock or a soft white necktie. Brown background. 


Signed at the upper left: R. S. Z. 


No. 138 


R. S. ZIMMERMAN 


CoNTEMPORARY 


THE CONNOISSEUR—A PORTRAIT 
PO-+r Lo. 


Height, 91% inches; width, 7 inches 


A man of strong features and large, his skin wrinkled 
with years, is seen at half-length in the black habit of 
a monk, against a brown background. He wears a 
skull-cap, from which his thatch of tousled black hair 
projects before his large ears and over his forehead, and 
in one hand he holds a book—with a finger between the 
leaves. In the other hand is a glass of golden wine, 
partly emptied, and the clerical connoisseur’s lips are 
drawn in as he savors the product of the vineyard 
judicially, looking thoughtfully at the spectator the 
while. 


Signed at the upper left: R. S. Z. 


SGOr 


po’ 


No. 14 


N. V. DIAZ DE LA PENA 


Frencu: 1808—1876 


FOREST OF FONTAINEBLEAU 


(Panel) Olle huweh 


Height, 7 inches; length, 101% inches 


Dens is the foliage of midsummer in the great forest, 
and bright the sunshine of a fair and breezy day. The 
blue sky is full of light, active clouds, still for the 
most part in feathery form, and its blue and its white 
are reflected in a winding stream which is seen in sun- 
shine in the middle distance through a broad oval open- 
ing between trees of the foreground. Here, in the 
grateful shade, a girl is seated on the grass, reading 
or sewing. Out. in the sunlight the trees are thick 
along the stream, their reflections mingling with those 
of the clouds. 


Signed at the lower left: N. Diaz. 


No. 15 


J. L. A. THEODORE GERICAULT 


Frencu: 1791—1824 


i BATTLE SCENE 
SABO (Panel) Olle Baeaceh, Lgush 


Height, 7, inches; length, 1134 inches 


Tue heavy smoke of battle envelops the picture. Where 
it lightens at left and center, cavalrymen are seen 
rushing toward the right on white and black horses, 
their sabers raised. The horses flounder among en- 
cumbrances on the ground; and in the right foreground, 
enshrouded in the smoke, a defending soldier thrusts a 
bayonet towards two oncoming riders, as he stands 


behind the heavy wheel of a disabled cannon. 


Purchased from William Macbeth, New York. 


No. 16 


GUSTAVE COURBET 


Frencu: 1819—1878 


tho OLD MILL 
4 


cron J Moalfedats 


Height, 12 inches; width, 834 inches 


On the right a line of staunch birches, with-silvery bark, 
comes into the picture—outposts at the edge of a wood 
whose shadows cover the foreground and nearer trees, 
while the farther trunks reflect the sunlight. In the 
middle distance toward the left is an old gray and 
brown mill, and in front of it rushes the mill-stream, 
tumbling in white foam in its rocky bed down the incline 
of the foreground. Through an opening between the 
trees on the right is glimpsed a figure in a boat, on the 
quiet water of the mill-pond above the dam. 


No. 17 


DAVID JOHNSON, N.A. 


AMERICAN: 1827—1908 


SCENE IN LIVINGSTON COUNTY, 


NEW YORK 
ie. Lemay | 


Height, 10 inches; length, 12 inches 


Tue sky is a brilliant azure on a bright day of mid- 
summer, and carries tenuous patches of white and gray- 
ish vapor aloft, while banks of light cumuli lie along 
the horizon. In front of distant broad hills are rich 
meadows, flat and wide-spreading and _ supporting 
numerous trees of full foliage. A broad brook winds 
through the meadows, and in the foreground a white 
and a red cow are standing in it, one drinking. Beyond 
them a huge oak with quadruple trunk spreads its great 
branches against the sky and furnishes shade for more 


cows which have gathered there. 


Signed at the lower left, D.J., in monogram. 


Purchased from S. P. Avery, New York. 


KE 


No. 18 


EMIL DE CAUWER 


Betcian: 1828—1873 


INTERIOR OF A CATHEDRAL 


(Panel) L.A Au 


Height. 121%, inches; width, 10 inches 


A section of the ornate interior of a gray stone 
cathedral is shown, with organ, paintings, chapels and 
railings, and sightseers being conducted around. 
Crippled beggars sit on the floor, and the sunshine 
illuminates parts of the great spaces, leaving other 
parts in shadow. It is in the effect of light on the 
fabric that the artist has found his greatest attrac- 


tion. 


Signed at the lower left: Emil de Cauwer, Pt., 1854. 


No. 19 


E. P. BERNE-BELLECOUR 


Frencu: 1838—1910 


THE SENTINEL 


z@ 084 epee). 27 Austhiwtioh, 


Height, 1334 inches; width, 914 inches 


Tue flat land, a little of which appears in the fore- 
ground and less in the distance, is lightly covered with 
snow, which has not found lodgment on a steep brown 
earthen bank that extends across the narrow picture and 
serves as background for the figure of a French in- 
fantryman, on sentinel duty, who is pictured in alert 
attention to something overhead. With one knee bent 
he leans forward, resting his back lightly against the 
bank, and musket in hand peers upward. Beside him 


is a leaning gray tree. 


Signed at the lower left: E. Berne-Bellecour, 1893. 


No. 20 


GEORGE LANCE 


BritisH: 1802—1864 


657 STILL LIFE g iy off 


Height, 12 inches; length, 14 inches 


PuRPLE grapes, on a stem, are heaped in a woven basket 
of broad strands, and over them is lying a ripe yellow 
pear having a touch of red. Close by is a large bunch 
of white grapes, brilliant in the light, and back of them 
a stem of ripe raspberries projects. White currants 
lie near a rosy and yellow peach, and a dark red apple 
is seen in shadow, while in front of the basket is a 


small bird’s-nest with three eggs in it. 


No. 21 


BAREND CORNELIS KOEKKOEK 


Dourcu: 1803—1862 


MARINE 


can Jf Mildubeg 
Gb. 4 


Height, 1134 inches; length, 1434 inches 


/OO7 


Numerous sailing vessels of different nationalities ap- 
pear under swift way in a goodly breeze, off a busy 
port. The sea is choppy and spindrift is flying. Spray 
dashes over a blunt-bowed fisherman with colored sails, 
on the wind in the foreground, while a black schooner 
with white canvas is going easily down the wind a little 
distance away. Farther out is a square rigger, and a 
point of the land with town buildings appears. in the 
distance at the left. 


From the Gilmore Collection, Baltimore. 


Vee 


No. 22 


EMANUEL NOTERMAN 


Bereian: 1808—1863 


MONKEYS PLAYING WITH DICE 


(Panel) eA 


Height, 121% inches; length, 1534 inches 


Two monkeys, dressed in red, blue, white-and yellow, 
and one of them wearing a cap with a feather stuck in 
its band, are represented in a dispute over a game of 
dice. One stands on the right of the table, chattering 
something emphatic to the other, which is seated facing 
the spectator and turns pugnaciously toward his op- 
ponent. Two dice are on the board, with a brown 
tankard which reflects the light. 


Signed at the left, on the table: Em. Noterman. 


2No.- 23 


EDWARD L. HENRY, N.A. 


AMERICAN: 1841— 


Pyre | LEAVING a eA z ; 


Height, 10 inches; length, 17 inches 


A FARMER is taking his daughter to the railway station, 
using his light box wagon. They have just pulled out 
of the barn which stands on the right at the top of a 
rise, and are coming directly forward in the farm road, 
a dog running beside the wagon and chickens scattering 
out of the way. Near a split-rail fence a little girl in 
sunbonnet is standing beside a red and white calf, and 
men are seen working in a field. The farmer leans 
toward the young woman, who listens to him. She wears 
a straw hat trimmed with red and a light red shawl, 
«nd carries an open blue parasol. It is a sunny day 
with few clouds in the light blue sky. 


Signed at the lower right: E. L. Henry. 


No. 24 


JOHN CONSTABLE, R.A. 


ENGLISH: 1776—1837 


LANDSCAPE WITH DOG CHASING 
DUCKS : 
400 ——— ve E thule 
( ) 
Height, 12 inches; length, 16 inches 


Ir is getting toward sunset and the sky is streaked with 
red and yellow, lavender and mauve and pink, and gray, 
many of its tones being repeated in a small pond in the 
foreground. On the left a rambling English farmhouse 
with thatch roofs appears in many soft colors, before 
a group of tall trees, and a woman walks toward it, 
while a dog has turned and is chasing a duck over the 
land, other ducks appearing in the pond. Around are 
rolling hills and wild fields. 


From the artist’s grandson. 


Purchased by the present owner from Leggatt Brothers, London. 


The picture bears the following indorsement in writing, pasted 
to the back of the panel: 


“This picture of farm buildings, with a sunset sky over a com- 
mon, and dog chasing some ducks, by John Constable, R.A., was 
purchased by us from the artist’s grandson, Mr. Hugh Constable, 
to whom it was bequeathed. Guaranteed genuine. 

(Signed ) “Leccatt BrorHers.” 


(-2 — Pen. 27,98F seo 


No. 25 


EUGENE JOSEPH VERBOECKHOVEN 


490+ | . Breteran: 1799—1881 ey f , “YG jee 


AT THE BARN DOO 


Height, 121, inches; length, 164% inches 


A FARMER Whose clothing shows red, green, brown and 
blue, is about to push open the heavy door of a gray- 
plastered stable, which has a thick and rambling roof of 
brown thatch. His brown and black horse, released 
from the wagon, has followed him and looks expectantly 
for the opening of the door, as does a shaggy-haired 
dog which has also come up. Near a barrel at the 
corner, chickens are pecking at a sheaf of straw. In 
the distance are green and yellow flat fields, under a 
sky of clear blue with rolling masses of delicate gray 


cumuli,. 


Signed at the upper right: EKugéne Verboeckhoven, ft., 1855. 


Purchased from C. W. Kraushaar, New York. 


No. 26 


ZL ee DAVID JOHNSON, N.A. 
O- AMERICAN: 18271908 ETD 


RODGERS SLIDE, LAKE GEORGE 


Height, 11 inches; length, 20 inches 


Tue beautiful Horicon, silvery-blue and whitened by 
slight ripples, and mirroring the many-hued rocks, the 
green woods and the sky, extends in a bend through the 
center of the picture between rocky hills and mountains 
covered with thick vegetation. In the middle distance, 
just before the lake curves out of sight, a white side- 
wheel steamboat with tall black smokestack is seen, and 


in the foreground are three women in a rowboat. 


Signed at the lower left with the artist's monogram and the 
date 1864, and on the back with his full name and the 
title of the picture as well as the date. 


No. 27 


ARTHUR QUARTLEY, N.A. 


AMERICAN: 1839—1886 J 


LANDSCAPE 
(Oval) 


Height, 15 inches; width, 12 inches 


A BROOK issuing from the middle distance is white where 
it takes a small tumble and hastens down to turn into 
the foreground in a wooded glen, where its waters 
darken. Tall, slender trees grow as a screen against a 
sky filled with colorful clouds, and a thick tangle of 


underbrush grows down to the water’s edge. 


Signed at the lower left, A. Q., in monogram. 


75 


No. 28 


MLLE. ROSA BONHEUR 


Frencu: 1822—1899 


WILD BOAR JG Wiehe 


Height, 15 inches; width, 12 inches 


Tur shaggy animal stands athwart the view, apparently 
having just come to a stop in a leisurely walk, his 
forefeet planted side by side and one hind foot in 
advance of its mate. His bristling thick coat is dark 
brown streaked with black, his eye looks for the moment 
sleepy rather than vicious, and the great snout and 
massive head contrast curiously with the ragged and 
stumpy tail. He stands in green grass which appears 
moist as after a rain, and he is studied near by, so 


the green turf forms also the background. 


Signed at the lower right: Rosa Bonheur. 


From the Bonheur sale and carrying the seal in red on the back: 
Vente Rosa Bonheur, 1900. 


No. 29 


CHRISTIAN SIEBOLD 


AUSTRIAN: EIGHTEENTH CENTURY 


PORTRAIT OF THE ARTIST BY 


| et of Bld - 


(Panel) 
Height, 1534 inches; width, 1214 inches 


zap and shoulders likeness of the artist (who was 
portrait painter to the Empress Maria Theresa), 
turned slightly toward the left but facing full front. 
He is smooth-shaven, with light brown eyebrows; his 
hair is concealed by an elaborate cap of a sort of 
clair-de-lune hue with brown shadings. His large, wide- 
open blue eyes are looking slightly downward, and a 
paint-brush shoots upward from behind one ear. His 
white shirt or blouse is open at the neck, and over it is 


a cloak which matches his cap. 


1b: 


No. 80 


WILLIAM MAGRATH, N.A. 


AMERICAN: ConvTEMPORARY 


“COME TO YOUR DADDY” 


(Panel) LE. bbuubrule, 


Height, 15 inches; length, 18 inches 


In the velvety brown and gray interior of what appears 
to be an Irish or Scotch peasant’s home, the family is 
gathered around the fireplace, where embers still glow 
on the hearth, an iron kettle beside them. In front of 
the hearth is a gray table with the remains of a meal, 
and a red-haired man in drab with green stockings has 
pushed back his chair and extends his arms toward a 
fat infant whose hair favors his own, who is held by 
a stout, bare-footed woman in a purplish waist and 
red skirt. In the chimney-corner sits the grandmother, 


beside the wooden crib. 


Signed at the lower left: W. Magrath, 1897. 


No. 31 


H. BOLTON JONES, N.A. 


AMERICAN: 1848— 
Yq panpscapE bliaban 


Height, 1234 inches; length, 18 inches 


A LITTLE-UsED roadway with grass growing between 
the wheel-tracks passes through a green field, where 
patches of brown growths rise above the grass, and 
makes a bend toward the left before a screen of trees 
growing on a ridge. Beyond a gate is a low country, 
with occasional distant tall trees. The trees of the 
ridge are scraggly and tall, with sparse foliage touched 
with brown; and a sky filled with colored clouds is vis- 


ible between their branches. 


Signed at the lower right: H. Bolton Jones, 1878. 


No. 82 


ALBERT BIERSTADT, A.N.A. 


/ OS" 7 AMERICAN: 1830—1902 0 Ys 4, hk appt 


YOSEMITE VALLEY, CALIFORNI 
Height, 14 inches; length, 20 inches 


Wanverinc through the picture between the right 
foreground and the central middle distance is the river, 
its mirror-surface marked everywhere with reflections, 
whether of trees, banks or sky. On the right the 
ponderous cliffs loom out of the picture, while in the 
distance they rise against a colorful sky which dis- 
tributes its chromatic radiations over cliffs and water. 
At the left, on a flat point under a low cliff, two men 
are fishing. 

Signed at the lower left: A. Bierstadt, 64. 


From the Hamilton Easter Collection, Baltimore. 


No. 33 


WILLIAM KEITH 


AMERICAN: 1839—1911 


THE OLD SAN FRANCISCO MISSION 


Height, 14 inches; length, 21% 


Tue building group extends almost across the picture, 
with an indefinite landscape visible at the right, where 
green bushes appear near by and blue hills or moun- 
tains in the distance; broad sandy-brown foreground, 
where a boy stands beside a donkey with loaded paniers. 
The church on the left is gray, and the low build- 
ings adjoining to right of it are brown, all under 
Spanish projecting roofs of red tile. Pigeons flutter 
about the Mission roofs and various persons are seated 
and standing in front of and along the porches. 


Signed at the lower left: W. Keith, ’91; and marked at the 
lower right: S. F. Mission, 1889. 


No. 34 


WILLIAM TROST RICHARDS, N.A. 


LBO 7 AMERICAN: 1833—1905 
MARINE—MISTY WEATHER 


(ramet) Cle houutltth, Agu | 
Fleight, 14 inches; length, 26 inches 


A .wicHt haze hangs over a gently-moving summer sea. 
The water is a bright gray-blue as it gathers the scat- 
tered sunshine through the mist. The low waves come 
in from the right in long lines of white, miniature surf, 
rolling up the brown beach on the left in irregular 
spreadings of thin white bubbles. Out in the mist a 
spectral ship is outlined. 


Signed at the lower left: Wm. T. Richards, 1871. 


No. 35 


EK. P. BERNE-BELLECOUR 


Frencu: 1838—1910 


EN SELLE 


HOky cme) LG, Meldacbeg 


Height, 16 inches; length, 21 inches 


In the foreground in the center of a recently-cut hay- 
field are two troopers, in the bright sunshine. One, 
already mounted on a light bay horse which faces the 
left, looks toward the spectator; his comrade, a bugler, 
is about to mount a gray by his side and is seen from 
the back. The soldiers appear against a group of trees 
as a background, and a mound of the new-mown hay 
stands not far off, while in the distance at the left, 
beyond the trees, a detachment of mounted soldiery is 
drawn up in a narrow road that crosses the broad, flat 


field country. 


Signed at the lower left: E. Berne-Bellecour, 1910. 


Exhibited at the Paris Salon, 1910. 


Purchased direct from the artist. 


No. 86 


EK. P. BERNE-BELLECOUR 


Frencu: 1838—1910 


LE CHEMIN LE PLUS COURT 


a/O7 (Panel) Ll 


Height, 16 inches; length, 211% inches 


Ar the junction of two brown earth roads over rolling 
green fields a French cavalryman on foot is giving 
directions to a mounted guardsman as to his shortest 
route, indicating the way with his raised arm. The 
mount is a light bay, which stands soberly while its 
rider studies the direction to which his imformant 
points. Back on the right at the edge of an open wood 
are the tents of a military encampment, with soldiers 
strolling about, and on the left over a low green hill 
the top of a wood appears. The sky is a soft gray and 
the light throughout the landscape is diffused, with 


scarcely a shadow. 


Signed at the lower right: E. Berne-Bellecour, 


From the Salon of 1910. 


Purchased direct from the artist. 


a —_— 


No. 37 


ARTHUR PARTON,-N.A. 


AMERICAN: 1842— 


/b0-4 | ve 
 COWS|IN A EES vf 


Height, 17 inches; length, 22 inches 


THREE tawny cows—one with a white face—and a dark 
brown-red cow have made their way through tangled 
undergrowth of a thick green wood on the right to a 
shallow stream, which, emerging from a tree-covered 
landscape in the middle distance, comes forward and 
passes out in the right foreground. From the left the 
sunlight illumines the landscape, more or less sifting 
through a cloud-veil or mist. Foliage and ground- 
verdure are moist, the distant trees are hazy, and the 
sky is filled with aspiring white and dissolving gray 


clouds. 


Signed at the lower right: Arthur Parton. 


No. 38 


GEORGE MORLAND 


EncuisH: 1763—1804 


THE OLD WHITE HORSE 
Jf O-+4 


HK lah 


Height, 171%, inches; length, 24 inches 


An aged white horse that has earned its rest is lying 
down under the partial shade of some trees and in the 
shelter of a hill in a wild pasture-land. It has come 
down a gentle green slope to a hollow which promised 
seclusion, with green trees on either hand, and lies 
facing the right across the view, with a disdainful eye 
for whoso would disturb it. Over the knoll a patch 
of the sky is seen full of clouds, dark and tinged with 
yellow-white. 


Signed at the right, on the face of the hill: G. Morland, 
pinx. 


No. 39° 


EDWARD L. HENRY, N.A. 


A MERICAN: : 1841— 


is NEARING ey 
af JO 7 Ati liltham, fp 


Height, 1%, inches; length, 271% inches 


Aw old farmer in his best brown coat, with velvet 
collar, is driving homeward with his gray-haired wife, 
who has been visiting; she wears her finery and pro- 
tects herself from the sun with a blue-green parasol. 
They are in a flexible buckboard wagon that once was 
blue, over the seat of which a buffalo robe is thrown, 
‘and a small darky with a basket of fruit is “riding 
behind.” The old bay horse is jogging away from 
the spectator, and up the road ahead a boy and girl 
have. come down the hill from a low gray house to 
greet the home-comers, the boy sitting on a split-rail 


fence and waving his hat. 


Signed at the lower left: EK. L. Henry, ’82. 


65% 


No. 40 


GEORGE ARMFIELD 


ENGLISH 


LANDSCAPE WITH DOGS 
CATCHING A HARE 


Height, 18 inches; length, 24 inches PMI, 


Aw ancient English wood, dense in places and with an 
open spot of rolling land where the grass is short 
and trees of large trunk grow, is pictured in early 
autumn when the foliage has just begun to turn. In 
the distance the leaves are green, close at hand they 
are turning a warm yellow. Near two large trees 
on a knoll, two dogs have overtaken a hare which has 
just burst out from an abundant cover, and one of 
them has it on its back for its finish. 


Signed at the right. 


a 


No. 41 


THOMAS DOUGHTY 


AmeERICAN: 1793—1856 


DD LAKE GEORGE yf gy bw 


Height, 18 inches; length, 2741/4 inches 


Tue lake—or a part of it—lies blue-green in the 
center of the canvas, encompassed by green wooded 
hills except in the foreground, which is low and where 
brush and blasted trees show tones of yellow and 
brown. Near shore at the left a man is standing 
at the mast of a catboat, apparently having some diffi- 
culty in getting down the sail—the day is calm—and 
some swimmers cling to the stern of the boat. An- 
other swimmer farther out is propelling himself astride 


a board or log. 


Signed at the lower left: T. Doughty, 1826. 


No. 42 


RICHARD WILSON, R.A. 


Eneuisu: 1713—1782 


*K VIEW OF THE LAKE, 


ALBANO, ITALY 


1165 (Horvonal Oval) AL: YJ 


Height, 19%, inches; length, 24 inches 


Tue beholder looks down on the rounding basin of the 
lake, a cone-shaped knoll or mound in the immediate 
foreground rising high above the surrounding surface 
of both land and water. On the knoll are figures look- 
ing down upon the water, which is blue, with reflections 
of the sky, and is marked by shadows of the surrounding 
shores with their buildings and trees. In the distance 
beyond the lake is a peopled landscape, in sunlight, 
under yellow-tinged, gray-white cloud-billows in a pale 
sky. 


Signed at bottom, to right of center: Wilson. 


1s actually “Head oF Lake News” 
Compare Coustable , Wilson Recah TAa. 
Property fre Apvory, Hope New torr, 
Dec. 196¢ ~ label on bactc rerter; 
to ths auchen. SEE “sk,” 


card . 


No. 43 


J. G. BROWN, N.A. 


AMERICAN: 1831-—1913 


“CLEVER DOG?’ 
LOO “ai | Glo Mito } Ugivih 


Height, 24 inches; width, 17 inches 


A rounv-FAceED bootblack, without a hole in his black 
stocking, is sitting on his upturned red-brown kit- 
box, leaning back against a gray-green plastered wall 
and watching with a satisfied smile his pet dog, which 
stands on its hind legs or “sits up” in the attitude 
of “begging,” on its straw-stuffed box in front of him. 
He is dressed in black and without waistcoat, a knotted 
red bandana circling his neck and falling over his loose 


white shirt. At his feet are spread his tools of trade. 


Signed at the lower left: Copyright, J. G. Brown, N.A. 


Son 


No. 44 


BAREND CORNELIS KOEKKOEK 


Dutcu: 1803—1862 


THE SHEPHERDESS 
Height, 231, inches; width, 1834 inches 


Ar the end of a rough common, which forms the fore- 
ground, before a thick tangle of underbrush and sec- 
ond-growth woods, a bucolic maiden is seated at the 
base of a tall tree, watching over a few sheep and a 
cow which are grazing there. The cow, white with 
reddish patches, is nosing the grass, one sheep is 
nibbling and two are lying down. ‘The shepherdess, 
who wears a white waist and blue kerchief and a red 
skirt, and is facing the right, has turned to look 
at the observer of the scene. The woods are green, 


drying a little in late summer. 


Signed at the lower right: B. C. K. 


Ln. Aarons 


ae 


No. 45 


GEORGE MORLAND 


EncuisH: 1763—1804 


SHEEP AND CHILDREN | 


/HO-4 Height, 20 inches; length, 231 inches : f F 


Four fat sheep with thick, unctuous fleece, are being 
admired in the sheepcote by two children who look 
over a half-door that admits light upon the animals. 
The walls, plastered and of thick, heavy wood, are 
gray and brown, with greenish notes, and the roof is 
of a rich-brown thatch. The dense oleaginous wool 
reflects various hues in the play of the sunlight. The 
children are a tow-haired boy, and a taller girl of Eng- 
lish type—the fair young “flapper” of the Anglican 
vocabulary. Near the sheep are a pair of game 
chickens. The sheep have real expression, and the 
texture of their coats is rendered with suggestive pre- 
cision. 


Signed at the lower right: G. Morland 


No. 46 


J. G. BROWN, N.A. 


AMERICAN: 1831—1913 


«GETTING ACQUAINTED | 
KSO% rae 


Height, 25 inches; width, 20 inches 


Two round-faced bootblacks, one timid and the other 
not aggressive though inclined to be “tough,” are sit- 
ting on their tool-kits on the sidewalk against a plast- 
ered gray wall of greenish tinge. 'Timidity, with hands 
between his thighs and one foot nervously working over 
the toe of the other, leans his head slightly toward his 
comrade with a shy smile, his face seen three-quarters 
front; the other boy, who sits on the right, has turned 
his face toward him and is seen in profile. He also 


smiles. Both are in rags, and coatless. 


Signed at the lower left: J. G. Brown, N.A. 


No. 47 
FRITZ THAULOW 


Norwecian: 1847—1906 


THE MILL STREAM IN WINTER 


Kea, Height, 21, inches; length, 2534 inches 
O-7 ti heoutl, ewer, Lg $ 4, 


Tue air is charged with a penctrating, frosty humidity 
_and what of the lightly-clouded sky is visible is tinged 
with a cold, greenish yellow, its inhospitable color re- 
flected in the mottled water of the stream, which carries 
half-dissolved, half-congealed, snow in its current. The 
stream, entering the picture in the right foreground, 
passes straightaway for the middle distance, where it 
turns to the left about a staunch red-brick mill. A 
flat bank along the left and a flat field on the right 
of the water are covered with thick, wet snow, which 
whitens the roof of the mill and the roofs of lavender- 
gray houses with red-brick gables in the distance. Trees 
on which a few leaves linger catch the snow in fissures 
of the bark and in crotches, and here and there along 
the water’s edge hardy weeds push their blades above 


the white. 
Signed at the lower left: Fritz Thaulow. 


Purchased from Myers § Hedian, Baltimore. 


J107 


No. 48 


FERDINAND CHAIGNEAU 


Frencu: 1830— 


SHHEP AND HAYSTACKS 


Height, 20 inches; length, 26 inches Jb, 
A Fat plain of the Barbizon country as de the arfist 


loved to paint is shown at the evening hour, green 
with grass and coarser herbage, brown and yellow under 
plough and cultivation in various strips and unfenced 
fields. In the foreground a flock of gray sheep are 
gathered within the shadow of a tall, dark, conical 
haystack which rises between the spectator and the 
setting sun, whose refracted rays tint the sky at either 
side of the cone, and at the left tinge the oily coats 
of sheep on the outskirts of the flock with warm color. 
The shepherd in a blue blouse leans on his staff, and 
his watchful dog is near him, and off in the distant fields 


are other haystacks, dark against the distant sky. 


Signed at the lower left: Fd. Chaigneau. 


No. 49 


UNKNOWN CONTEMPORARY 
ARTIST 


SIk JOSHUA eae? 
XO T Height, a inches; width, 20 Poke. : Loar be 


Heap and shoulders portrait of the first President of 
the Royal Academy, in familiar aspect. Figure turned 
somewhat toward the right, the sitter has turned his 
head to face the spectator directly, and looks him in 
the eye with keen, intent, analytic gaze. The rims 
of his large spectacles with horn bows reflect the high 
light that beats upon his broad forehead, and mark 
effective shadows between his hazel eyes and rosy 
cheeks, the bows losing themselves in his gray wig. 
White stock and jabot are conspicuous within his gray- 
green coat and white waistcoat, which, loose about the 
neck, are buttoned over the chest. Dark background— 


brown, and almost black. 


No. 50 


JOHN CONSTABLE 


EnouisH: 1776—1837 A 


J30 4 crnuncren, Liifien Meth 


HAMPSTEAD HEATH 
Height, 241, inches; length, 291% inches | 


On the right is a cottage, gray-brown in shadow, 
white in the sunlight, with an outside red-brick chim- 
ney, its velvety thatched roof a mottled olive-yellow and 
brown. It stands at a lonely roadside, beyond a broken 
wall, a brown tree behind it and another across the 
road at the left. Farther on the brown roofs of other 
houses nestling below a green hill are seen, and in the 
distance the lower lands are a green-blue under a blue 
sky filled with tumbling masses of white and gray clouds. 


No. 51 


WILLIAM HART, N.A. 


AMERICAN: 1823—1894 


LANDSCAPE AND COWS 


Llo-7 (Panel) L luli 


Height, 28 inches; width, 24 inches 


Ruecep trees grow on the right, and a group of others 
on the left, at the edge of a green pasture, and between 
and in front of them, in the foreground, is a pond 
where a number of cows have come to drink. One cow 
of fulvous coat stands between dark-brown and red 
ones, whose hues reflected in the placid water tan its 
silvery-gray surface; and back in the shadows a black 
cow is approaching the drinking place. The pasture 
is in-sunshine, and beyond it are large green trees and 
distant hills. Some of the rich foliage and herbage 


has turned brown. 


Signed at the lower left: Wm. Hart, 1888. 


No. 52 


WILLIAM TROST RICHARDS, N.A. 


AMERICAN: 1833—1905 


SCENE ON THE NEW 


ENGLAND COAST 
LeeO 7 


(Water Color) bf Sted 
Ya 


Height, 22% inches; length, inches 


THE ocean, gray under an expansive mass of gray- 
white clouds largely overspreading a light blue sky, 
stretches broad and level from a far gray-white horizon 
to a low and broken foreground shore. On the right 
the shore runs out in a low headland, grass-covered, 
to lines of brown rocks which extend farther out into 
the sea, which splits lazily upon their outlying boulders 
and rolls up narrow lines of white foam. Closer by is 
a stretch of sandy beach, with gray rocks to the left, 
where the low surf comes up in longer sweeps. 


Signed at the lower right: Wm. T. Richards, 1881. 


No. 538 


GEORGES MICHEL 


Frencu: 1763—1843 


WOODCHOPPERS 


Height, 254, inches; length, 32 inches 


Two sturdy French peasants, one in yellowish-brown 
and the other wearing blue trousers and a dark red belt, 
have just felled a large tree and are taking a short 
rest. ‘The tree, which stood at the edge of a ravine 
at the left, has fallen to the right across the foreground, 
and one of the men is seated on it with his arms folded, 
while his comrade stands in front of him lighting his 
pipe. Beyond them in the-center of the composition 
stands a group of tall trees, clustered together at the 
edge of the ravine, which is wooded and in shadow, 
while across the ravine, on the left, a cultivated hill- 
side with farm buildings and windmills is in brilliant 


sunshine. 


Purchased from Myers & Hedian, Baltimore. 


No. 54 


GEORGE MORLAND 


EncuisuH: 1763—1804 


THE VILLAGE PUMP 


L007 


Height, 30 inches; width, 25 inches 


A TALL pump with rectangular case is seen at left- 
center of the foreground, against the wall of a plastered 
cottage with diamond window panes and thick thatch 
roof, a corner of which projects into the picture from 
the left. An iron teakettle hangs on the pump’s spout, 
and a red and white shaggy-haired dog is drinking from 
the trough at the pump’s base. At the right, beside the 
pump, stands a buxom young woman in white waist and 
yellow skirt, with a blue apron and deep pink cloak, who 
bestows an intent if somewhat questioning regard upon 
a husky bumpkin seated on a tub at the foot of a 
tree-stump, looking amorously up at her. 

Signed on the pump: G. Md., 1799. 
Has been engraved. 


Purchased from the late I. D. Ichenhauser, New York. 


No. 54. THE VILLAGE PUMP. 
By Georce Morranp, 


No. 55 


FREDERICK A. BRIDGMAN, N.A. 


American: 1847— 


STREET IN CONSTANTIN 
MOE, Gp tuarhinbul, 


Height, 271%, inches; length, 361 inches : 


Wuite walls border a street which has an irregular 
stone pavement. The street is narrow, crooked, of un- 
even surface. At the left an aged merchant, with the 
long white beard of a prophet, is seated within his 
open booth, back to the spectator, his head turned to 
the right and face seen in profile. Outside hang gar- 
ments of soft colors, and a woman stands there, her 
face disclosed, pouring a cup for a horseman who has 
ridden up on a muscular stallion. Both man and 
woman are in brilliant colors, as are the trappings of 
the horse. Opposite, dark-skinned men squat at 
another booth, and up the street are seen a water 
carrier, shoppers and more turbaned shop-folk. From 
aloft a figure looks down from a high story of a 
building. 

Signed at the lower left: F. A. Bridgman, 1884. 


100-7 


No. 56 


THOMAS SULLY 


AMERICAN: 1783—1872 


PORTRAIT OF GEORGE WASHING- 
TON (After Charles Wilson Peale) 


Height, 30 inches; width, 25 ineneeFlh 


At half-length and turned toward the left, the Father 
of His Country is observed with face three-quarters to 
the front, his calm blue eyes directed with thoughtful, 
judicious gaze far to the left back of the spectator. His 
broad brow is white and his cheeks are rosy-warm, and 
a fringe of gray partly screens his ear. His black vel- 
vet coat is relieved by a white stock and a jabot of 
grayish mixture with brown and white notes. Dark 
neutral background, lightened back of the shoulder. 


No. 57 
M. F. He DE HAAS, N.A. 


DurcH-AMERICAN: 1832—1895 


OLD FORT AND BEACH 
AT FLUSHING, HOLLAND 


VLA) at Height, 24 inches; length, we LO 


Ar the center of the foreground a crescent beach 
begins, swinging toward the left and outward again in 
the middle distance to a sharp point. Just within the 
point is seen a dark fortress with a tall round tower, 
and back of it, inland, red tile roofs, tall trees and 
an edge of a green field. The curving beach in front 
of it is yellow and sandy-brown, and near the fore- 
ground a stout girl, barefoot, is paddling in the spent 
wavelets, near a stouter woman who is seated on the 
sand. ‘The sea is choppy in a fresh breeze, and toward 
the right a heavy Dutch fishing-boat is putting out 
under sail, with several people aboard her, and other 


sail are seen in the offing, a steam tug near them. 


Signed at the lower left: M. F. H. de Haas, N.A. 


Purchased from Myers & Hedian, Baltimore. 


No. 58 


GEORGES MICHEL 


FrencH: 1763—1843 


AIO 
A STORM ‘. 


Height, 33 inches; length, 381%, inches 


A HuNTER, his gun in both hands ready for use, is 
following his dog across an open grassy stretch of land, 
the dog just about to nose his way into’ the cover 
which bounds the grass plot on the right and in the 
distance. At the left in the foreground is a rugged 
but blasted tree, one of whose fallen limbs lies on the 
ground before it, and short, young and slender trees 
are scattered about the outlines of the open space, 
which is in bright sunshine. All around and beyond 
it, darkness has settled over the land, under the shadow 
of dense lowering storm-clouds which are being driven 


across the sky by a gale that bends the trees. 


Purchased from Myers § Hedian, Baltimore. 


4007 


No. 59 


EDOUARD PAIL 


FreNcH 


FEEDING THE CHICKEN 


Height, 35 inches; length, 45% inches 


THe crescent moon is visible in the sky while yet the 
last rays of the setting sun gild the roof-tops of a long 
line of thatch-roofed buildings which extends from the 
left for a considerable distance across the picture, the 
farther cottages darkening, and gloaming settling 
amongst trees and brush beyond them, toward the right. 
In front of the trees and buildings the whole broad 
foreground is covered with yellowish-green grass, and 
brown, withered plants with fuzzy blossom-tops, like 
thistles gone to seed. From about the field numbers 
of hens of many colors hasten to a spot where a woman 


in a peasant’s cap is scattering their evening feed. 


Signed at the lower left: Edouard Pail. 


/ 


No. 60 


GEORGE ROMNEY 


EncuisH: 1734—1802 


PORTRAIT OF LORD BYRON 


@ e 
/180 7 Height, 49 inches; width, 39 inches of Uf. VW, 


Tue poet is presented at three-quarter length, seated, 
book in hand, and looking directly at the observer. 
He faces the right, three-quarters front, with his left 
arm on the back of the sofa on which he sits, which is 
upholstered in rich green and ornamented in gold. His 
coat is of a very deep tone of green, with a high shawl 
collar, brown in hue; and a jeweled watch-fob appears 
below his right arm which reaches across his body to 
hold his book up to the other hand. He is pictured 
here as with golden-brown, bushy and wavy hair, and 
is shown as a young man with large, clear blue eyes 
and rosy cheeks. His high white collar is enwound with 
orange-yellow. Conventional background of pillar, 


draperies and sky. 


Signed at the lower left, on the sofa: Romney. 


No. 60. PORTRAIT OF LORD BYRON. 
By Georce Romney. 


No. 61 


THOMAS COLE, N.A. 


AMERICAN: 1801—1848 


Y504 CATSKILL MOUNTAINS Yy 
a liter 


Height, 39 inches; length, 621% inches 


Iw the central distance a conical mountain peak rises 
high against a pale, greenish-blue sky that is tinged 
with reflections from reddish-yellow and dark gray 
clouds which at either side hang low over the neighbor- 
ing mountains and diversify the landscape with light 
and shadow. On a slope in the right foreground the 
forest is a mass of bright autumn color, and at its foot 
in the middle distance a small lake or stream is dis- 
cerned, and figures can be seen in a small boat or 
canoe. At the left a tree splintered by storm or light- 


ning is seen near a leaning and weather-beaten neighbor. 


Signed at the lower left: 'T. Cole, Catskill, 1838. 


Purchased from Mrs. J. G. Chapman, granddaughter of Mr. Cole. 


No. 62 


GEORGE INNESS, N.A. 


AMERICAN: 1825—1894 


THE JUNIATA RIVER NEAR 
HARRISBURG, ees) 2 ANIA 


700 if Height, 36 inches; length, 54 inches 


Inness in his earlier style is seen in this canvas, an 
American landscape portrait, without the brilliant 
coloring of his later works and with a remarkable at- 
mosphere. he river, appearing in the right fore- 
ground, is colored there with reflections of green and 
brown trees on its bank, and emerging into the sunlight 
turns in the middle distance_and winds to the right 
about the point which sustains them, disappearing there 
from view. On its left bank in the foreground a large 
birch tree with bifurcated trunk rises out of the picture, 
leaning over the water, and just beyond it a man in 
shirtsleeves stands against a rail fence watching some 
cows. ‘Two of them, a white and a black one, are over 
their knees in the stream, and a red cow is feeding in 
the juicy grass of its gently sloping bank. In the 
distance are sunny meadows and part of a village, seen 


against more distant hazy mountains. 


Signed on the tree at the left, G. I., in monogram, 1856. 


Painted to order for the late Augustus Albert of Baltimore. 


a 


"VN ‘SSENN] dOuody hg 
‘VINVA'TASNNGd “OHUNASIUUVH UVAN YUAAIN VIVINAL AHL 39 ON 


SECOND AND LAST EVENING’S SALE 


WEDNESDAY, FEBRUARY 18, 1914 


IN THE GRAND BALLROOM OF THE PLAZA 


BEGINNING AT 8.15 o’cLock 


45° | No. 63 JS butt 


HENDRIK MARTENSZ ZORG 


Dutcu: 1611—1670 © 


DRINKING PARTY 
(On Copper) 


Height, 6 inches; length, 834 inches 


SeaTED on low three-legged stools, and overturned tubs, 
in an inn yard, are three aged cronies drinking wine 
and smoking. One in red has his back to the observer, 
one in yellow faces him, and a third has turned to 
pass his glass to a robust serving-maid in old-rose, 
white and black, who comes with a pitcher to replenish 
it. A fourth aged man with a cane is coming through 
a doorway. The light is subdued, and the tone of the 
whole, in keeping with the scene, is a mellow brown 


permeated with olive. 


‘CO 


No. 64 v Ke 
JACOB TOORNVLIET 


Dutcu: 1641—1719 


o 
oF | 
nu ; PORTRAIT OF A GIRL bo 


eer (On Copper) i Mnoedly + 


f Height, 81% inches; width, 61/, inches 


A youne girl with large features, her brown hair in 
“pigtails’”’ and tied with red ribbon, stands against a 
table which is in front of her, on which are large leather- 
covered parchment volumes. One she has picked up, 
standing it against her breast, closed, and resting her 
right arm on its top while her left wrist is bent around 
it at the bottom. She has paused there, as though sent 
for the book but without haste, and turns: her head 
dreamily to her left so that her face is seen in profile, 
in a strong light. She wears a loose gray jacket whose 
turned-back cuffs reveal a tan lining, and a broad 


white linen collar with lacework border. 


FCA pe RLRIV it eae Nay 


Signed at the upper right: J. Toornyliet. 


$ 


6 A 
i No. 65 


JAN VAN GOYEN 


Dotcu: . 1596—1656 


THE BRIDGE 


(Panel) CHb uu taush, Lp 


Height, 71, inches; length, 101 inches 


A BRIDGE with heavy abutments and short arch, its 
narrow roadway guarded by rustic rails, extends across 
the picture, brick houses with large chimneys and tile 
roofs standing at either approach to it amid groups 
of trees. Under it in the stream a man is rowing a 
boat in which are two stout women in red waists, and 
on land at either side are other persons, men and 
women of rural type. The composition is in mellow 
tones of brown, soft dull red, and yellowish-green, with 
the water in sunlight beyond the bridge reflecting a 
light sky in which grayish and white clouds float before 
the blue depths. 


\|,0 


No. 66 


ADAM ELSHEIMER , 


German: 15782—1620 


CONFLAGRATION—THE 


BURNING OF TROY 
(On Copper) 


Height, 7%, inches; length, 11 inches 


A city of palaces is in flames at night. In the dark 
foreground a mighty press of people comes forward, 
horror in their faces, such of them as can be seen, 
hands extended in helpless appeal. Beyond them one 
looks between buildings across a vast open space, 
beyond which the red, yellow and white flames throw 
their glare upon the burning walls of magnificence, with 
people everywhere striving to get away and the air 
overhead filled with black smoke. 


—* 


5 , No. 67 
ADRIAEN VAN OSTADE 


ast 


DutcH: 1610—1685 


MAN SMOKING 


wm BM. Mlteo 


Height, 71, inches; width, 6 inches 


A Durcuman of sharp face yet large features is por- 
trayed at three-quarter length, facing the spectator, 
seated and smoking a long clay pipe. He rests his 
right elbow on his thigh, and against a heavy wooden 
table at his side, holding the pipe in that hand. His 
face is florid and he looks as if the pipe were not his 
only consolation. He wears purple-brown breeches, 
a yellow jerkin and blue cloak, and a hat of truncated- 
cone shape, and appears stolid and content, against a 


background of olive-drab. 


From the Gilmore Collection, Baltimore. 


ho “an 


DAVID TENIERS (THE YOUNGER) 


aaa Durcu: 1610—1690 LE Y z 


MONKEYS—A SATIRE ON 
THE ENGLISH NAVY 


(Panel) 
Height, 834, inches; width, 634 inches 


Monkeys in naval hats and caps and variously dressed 
are seated and standing about a table of a public house, 
drinking, smoking, and in solemn discussion. They~ 
wear beards of sundry cut and fashion, and take each 
other and themselves most seriously. In their garb 
appear scarlet, blue, yellow and purple-brown, and the 
walls and floor are olive-gray and a red-brown. Another 
monkey is crawling in at the window, and in another 


room other figures are indicated. 


Signed at the lower right: D. Teniers, Fect. 


No. 69 


ADAM WILLAERTS. 


Durcu: 1577—1664 


ye (MARINE Wy 4, Yy 


Height, 9 inches; width, 12 inches 


THERE is a windy sky; and large cloud-billows, white on 
the sunny edges and purplish-gray below, are moving 
actively across the light blue expanse, above a lively 
sea. Coming forward in the foreground, almost under 
an ugly-looking projecting rock, an elaborate galley of 
many oars plunges in the choppy water. She is red 
and gold in her splendor and many persons are aboard 
her. In the offing a seventeenth century two-masted 
ship is tossing, headed in the opposite direction and 
reduced to little canvas, the seas careening her and 


dashing over her side. 


\$0" 


No. 70 
JAKOB JORDAENS 


Beician: 1593—1678 


MADONNA AND CHILD 


(On Copper) UI. Seaman, 


Height, 101%, inches; width, 8 inches 


A caum, pleasant-faced and robust peasant-mother is 
the Madonna, and she appears, with a halo radiating 
from her head, seated and wholly enwreathed in a pro- 
fusion of roses, tulips and many other flowers of bright 
and varied colors. She holds the nude Child nestling 
close against her capacious bosom, resting asleep on 
her left shoulder, and bends her head affectionately 
toward His. She is seen at three-quarter length, a 
light mantle over her brown hair, breast exposed, and 


wearing robes of white, red and blue. 


ub e No. 71 


JACOB TOORNVLIET ‘ \) 


S © 


Dutcu: ey ps ! 
helene 
PORTRAIT OF A FISHERWOMAN ; 


Height, 11 inches; width, 9 inches 


Acainst an olive-brown background with a bit of dull- 
red brick showing in a wall, a woman of the fisher-folk 
of Holland is portrayed at more than _ half-length, 
standing back of a narrow, light brown counter. Her 
figure faces the right, three-quarters front, and she 
has turned her head over her right shoulder so that 
she is looking to the left, her face seen three-quarters 
front and directly in the light, her projecting bonnet 
throwing a shadow across her forehead. Her round 
face is wrinkled, her complexion hardy, and her ex- 
pression careworn but kindly. She wears dark clothing 
anda white kerchief at her neck, and she holds on the 
counter and in one arm a fine large fish, while another 
fish is lying near. As much care has been taken with 
the still life as with the portrait, with the result of 


quality and expressiveness in both. 


Signed at the upper left: J. Toornvliet. 


40” 


Noo 72 


PAULUS POTTER 


e 
DutcH: ee ‘ sf f | 


LANDSCAPE AND OLD 


WHITE HORSE 
(Panel) 


Height, 11 inches; width, 934 inches 


‘A BROOK or narrow canal, appearing in the left fore- 


ground, turns to the right in the middle distance about 


a broad point or angle of land terminated by a high 
board barrier, up to which a sandy path or narrow 


roadway leads between grassy edges. Midway on the 


path an aged horse, white, with gray mane, tail and 
ankles, is standing dejectedly with head lowered and 


nigh hind leg flexed, the tip of the hoof only touching 


‘the ground. He is facing away from the spectator, 
‘turned three-quarters to the right, and has ‘halted 


between pollarded willows. Across the stream at the 


left a cow is drinking, near more pollards, and in the 


distance is a flat Dutch landscape. 


Signed at the lower right: Paulus Potter, 1649. 


No. 72. LANDSCAPE AND OLD WHITE HORSE. 
By Pavutus Porter. 


A 
) é 
fs No. 73 


aZ- VAN LIL 


DurcHu J Luwlw 


EAGLE DEV OURING A BIRD 


(Panel) 


Height, 10% inches; length, 14 inches 


Two eagles with golden-brown plumage are pictured 
on a mountain-top, their forms rising boldly against 
the sky. One, on the right, is holding a brightly- 
colored wild duck to the ground on its back, with one 
foot, while it steadies itself with its outspread wings 
touching the ground, and is tearing the breast of its 
quarry. ‘The other bird of freedom clings to a neigh- 
boring branch and turns toward the feast with an open 


beak. 
Signed at the lower right: 'T. Van Lil. 


r 


nae 


. We 
Me | 
vy JQ oad No. 74 Pins: a / 


po 


2 


DAVID TENIERS (THE YOUNGER) ra 


Dutcu: 1610—1690 


PORTRAIT OF THE Olle huh, 
ARTIST’S FATHE 


(Panel) 


ry 


Height, 9%, inches; length, 14 inches 


Tue elder painter is seated on a piece of a beam on 
the floor of an inn, before a barrel-top table on which 
is a jug, a dish and a white kerchief. He is dressed in 
yellow and green, wears a soft felt hat, and holds a 
smoking white clay pipe. He faces the right with 
head turned to the front and glances meditatively over 
his right shoulder. He is in an alcove and in another 
part of the room is a characteristic group of: cronies 


at cards. 
Signed at the lower left: D. Teniers, Ft. 


From the Dr. Wood Collection, Baltimore. 


4 


No. 75 
AART VAN DER NEER 


, wt a Dvurcu: 1603—1677 


30° 


ARIVER SCENE IN MOONLIGHT 


(Panel) ff hh, . 


Height, 10 inches; length 14 inches 


A Quiet river runs through the center of the composi- 
tion to its outlet in the sea, and straight ahead at the 
far-off horizon the bright white moon is just appear- 
ing above the water’s edge. Around it billowing white 
clouds are illuminated, the sky higher up remaining 
dark. The river is lighted in a subdued glow, and 
numerous sailboats and rowboats are seen with people 
in them. On the right are the houses of a village, and 
close in the foreground, at what may be an island, a 
man is leaning over in a rowboat lying close against a 


reedy bank. 
Signed at the lower left, A V D N, in monogram. 


From the Gilmore Collection, Baltimore 


(5 


No. 76 
NICOLAAS PIETERSZ BERCHEM 


Deutrcu: 1620—1683 


THE FORTUNE TELLER 
(Panel) 


Height, 12 inches; width, 91, inghes reves ; 


A company of armed men afoot and on nee are 
making their way through a defile in a mountainous 
country. Some are disappearing down a decline at the 
left, and beyond them are seen distant summits and a 
bit of blue sky. In the foreground in-a partly open, 
cave-like passage through the rocks, which here rise 
sharply out of the picture, a cavalier in brilliant cos- 
tume, mounted on a white horse, is speaking to a dusky, 
large-eyed maiden who stands at the roadside, or giving 
directions as to what shall be done with her, while one 
of his followers rests a detaining hand on her arm. A 
shaft of sunlight illumines the cavalier’s shoulder and 
his horse’s side. Ahead of him in the shadow of the 
rocks other figures are discerned, one apparently a 


woman in distress being supported by a whiskered man. 


Signed. 


From the De la Hay Collection, Antwerp. 


No. 77% 
ah ABRAHAM HONDIUS 


eee Durem: 1638—1695 


CHRIST BREAKING BREAD 


j 0 7 AT EMMAUS 
?) (Panel) 


Height, 10 inches; length, 1334 inches 4 Muocdlay leo 


A CLASSICAL portico is represented, a table spread with 


i 


cloth, and dishes on it, and around the table are gathered 

the figures, their faces lighted by a candle which stands 
: near the center. Outside is a landscape with a crescent 
: moon well up in the sky. The Christ is facing the spec- 
tator, a radiant halo about His head, the two at table 
with Him being seated, one at the left with his back 
to the observer, the other on the right and seen in 
profile. Food is being brought and a figure on the 
right points to the table while another is taking a wine 
bottle out of a tub. In front of the table a dog sits 
on its haunches, with nose pointed upward. The figures 


are in varied colors and all in a glow, and the Christ 


is in the act literally of breaking bread. 


From the Gilmore Collection, Baltimore. 


. 
4 0° No. 78 


CORNELISZ VAN POELENBURG 


DutcuH: 1586—1667 


DIANA, CALYPSO AND OTHERS 


(Oval Panel) - é bhurton 
4 ¢ 


Height, 13 inches; width, 11 inches 


Unprr massive ruins of an ancient castle on a cliff 
overhead, where some trees grow, a group of nymphs 
of large proportions are seated and standing on a 
rocky, brown and grass-grown ledge. Their scant 
draperies are blue, white, light yellow and orange- 
brown. Diana, with one hand raised to her pale blond 


hair, is facing the spectator and looking to the right, 


toward the cliff, while most of the others look with 


varying degrees of interest at something in the opposite 
direction, down the declivity, toward which one of them 
points. Three are dark and three are light, and all 
are of Teutonic adiposity, and the play of light on the 


flesh is varied. 


WNT 


—— 


No. 78. DIANA, CALYPSO AND OTHERS. 
By CorneEwisZ vAN POELENBURG. 


No. 79 


Dutcu 


{0 A T. T. LAUERS 


PORTRAIT OF AN ACTOR 


(Panel) SY, Yuet, 


Height, 12 inches; width, 91% inches 


A CLEAN-SHAVEN man, with brown hair in long curls, 
or a wig, is seated beside a table in an inn room with 
a gray wall. Above a mantelpiece hang play-bills. He 
has turned his back partly upon the table, resting his 
right elbow on it, and faces the right but looks toward 
the spectator—the audience—a wine glass in his right 
hand and his left folded over his breast, with his chin 
on his chest, his attitude in general one favored by dev- 
otees of the histrionic career. He is dressed in red, 
brown and green, with lace cuffs and jabot, and wears 
a large black hat. On the table are a white bowl and 


a candlestick and a long-stemmed clay pipe. 


From the Blakeslee Galleries, New York. 


\or 


A 


No. 80 


WILLEM VAN DE VELDE 


DutcH: SEVENTEENTH CENTURY 


DUTCH FISHING BOATS ' 


(Panel) WA Wh WITT 


Height, 1134 inches; length, 131 inches 


In the shallow waters of a harbor, off a town which 
can barely be made out in the distance on the left, 
numerous fishing vessels are to be seen, some moving 
slowly in the distance on the right, two lying at anchor 
well inshore in the foreground. Their high-peaked 
sails are cream-white and yellow-brown, and aboard are 
men in green, blue, red and yellow, idly chatting. Close 
inshore is a fisherman in a small-boat, beside which a 
bare-footed boy stands in the water. Billowing gray- 
white clouds roll in a robin’s-egg sky, and dark shadows 


from the sailboats mark the quiet water. 


From the Gilmore Collection, Baltimore. 


* + adi 
— = 


a ee 


i tl 


55 


No. 81 


PHILIPP PETER ROOS 


German: 1655—1705 


LANDSCAPE WITH FIGURES bp. Maal 
AND CATTLE 


Height, 11% inches; length, 141% incnes 


Day is passing, some gray clouds in a blue sky have 
white edges, seen toward the left between rocky hills. 
In the partly dark foreground, at the foot of a cliff 
which rises abruptly on the right, a woman is seated 
on the ground, facing the spectator. On her lap she 
holds a child who strokes the coat of a small pet dog 
that is lying on the mother’s knee. In front of the 
group stands a white cow, looking toward them, and 
a red and white calf and a white sheep are lying curled 
up on the ground. 


From the Gilmore Collection, Baltimore. 


goo" 


No. 82 


PHILIPS WOUWERMAN 


Dutcu: 1619—1668 


HAWKING PARTY 


(Panel) A yh Wher 


Height, 14 inches; width, 12 inches 


Tue party are gathered in the foreground. On the 
right a lady in rose and gold, riding a gray horse which 
is headed away from the spectator, turns and looks 
toward the front. Beside her at the left a gentleman 
is about to mount his white charger, which is held by 
an attendant, and at hand is a man mounted, and 
another on foot with falcons. Various birds appear 


in the air in the distance, over a hilly landscape. - 


Purchased from William Macbeth, New York. 


Sar, 


A 
e 
No. 83 


PIERRE MIGNARD 
Frencu: 1610—1695 


AND 
DANIEL SEGHERS 


FiemisuH: 1590—1661 


PORTRAIT OF A LADY 
fosech 
Height, 16% inches; width, 13 inches 


A ROSY-CHEEKED young lady, her hair dressed elabo- 
rately in curls and intertwined with pearls, is presented, 
head and shoulders, as in a cartouche or medallion em- 
bowered in flowers. Her rich blue waist, embroidered 
in white and gold and edged with lace, is moderately 
low at her neck, which is encircled with pearls, and 
pearl-ornaments adorn her sleeves. Her portrait is 
surrounded by a medley of blossoms of brilliant colors, 
the whole seen against a dark, rich, reddish-brown in- 
terior background. Portrait by Mignard; flowers by 
Seghers. 


no" 


No. 84 
HENRY SCHWEICKHART 


LANDSCAPE WITH FIGURES 


Height, 12% inches; length, 16% inches 


(This painting has been attributed to David Teniers the Younger.) 


A FRESH green landscape is pictured, the foreground 
freely overgrown with trees whose foliage is a deep 
green in partial shadow or shade, while open green 
fields seen beyond are in sunshine, and in the far 
distance is perceived a misty brown hill. Crossing the 
shaded foreground is a stream in which a peasant may 
be seen following a cow, while on the bank are two other 
persons, one back to the spectator, the other lying on 
his elbow on the ground and looking this way. 


A 
a No. 85 


JAN JOZEF HOREMANS (THE 
YOUNGER) 


Betoian: 1714—(after) 1790 


ARTIST’S STUDIO 


Height, 131, inches; length, 16 ‘OD bs ( 


Ir is a comfortable and care-free studio scene that is 
presented. The artist, a middle-aged man, in an old 
brown dressing-gown lined with green, is at work on 
a canvas but has paused for refreshment and with 
palette and brushes in one hand holds a wine glass in 
the other. A woman in white has fetched something 
on a plate, and at the artist’s elbow another man sits 
reading. A student is sketching in a corner, another 
lies at his ease on the floor, and a young pupil is enter- 
ing, hat in hand, with a portfolio of sketches. 


Signed on a bow of paints at bottom center: J. Horemans. 


From the Gilmore Collection, Baltimore. 


He 


No. 86 


PHILIPP PETERVGe. 


German: 1655—1705 


LANDSCAPE WITH CATTLE 


(On Copper) Be hh 
Height, 13%, inches; length, 17inches 


On the right in the foreground a peasant woman in 
red and green leans over the huge stone basin of a 
fountain set in a brown rocky cliff. Lying on the 
ground in front of the fountain is a heavy white bovine 
with long, wide-spreading and upcurving horns, a tall- 
horned mountain goat, and some white sheep and a dark 
one. In the distance a conventional classical landscape 
of blue mountains and trees. 


From the Gilmore Collection, Baltimore. 


r 
ee 


— = ——=— 


j/ - No. 87 


PIETER NEEFFS (THE 
YOUNGER) 


Betcian: 1601—1675 


INTERIOR OF 
ANTWERP CATHEDRAL 


(Panel) db. 4. Yuw 


Height, 13% inches; length, 1834 inches 


Tue spectator looks into one of the chapels, which is 
well lighted, where a worshiper kneels and persons 
are standing. ‘The steps leading up to it are in 
shadow and on them kneel a woman and a child. Out- 
side the chapel, on the floor of the cathedral, in the 
foreground, a one-legged man is seated with hands in 
the attitude of prayer, and hat on the stone floor where 
it might serve as a personal alms-basin. Ladies and 
gentlemen in silk and velvet, and peasants with their 
children, are here for sight-seeing and other purposes, 
and in the democracy of the place dogs accompany their 
masters. In an aisle on the right are two monks, and 
beyond is another chapel. The figures are attributed 
to Teniers the Elder. 


Signed on the column. 


0 


No. 88 


KLAAS MOLENAER 


DoutcH: —1676 


SKATING 


(Panel) A: VA Yum 


Height, 131% inches; length, 181% inches 


Winter has settled over the Netherlands, rivers and 
canals are frozen, and the people are.out for cold- 
weather enjoyment. The scene presents a bend in a 
broad river, its icy surface gray in the paling light 
of late afternoon. Men and women skate on it and 
fall down on it and push sleds on it, and an old-fash- 
ioned high-sided bob-sleigh filled with bundled-up elders 
is being drawn down to the ice by an old white horse. 
On shore is a picturesque group of houses among trees, 
and a windmill; and occasional figures are seen walk- 
ing. 

Signed at the lower right: K. Molenaer. 


,o 


SCHOOL OF RUBENS 


No. 89 


PORTRAIT OF A MAN e 


(ane I Ullawus 


Height, 16%, inches; width, 10% inches 


Under title “A Dutch Burgomaster,” has been attributed to 
g 
Frans van Mieris.) 


Heap and shoulders portrait of a gentleman of Flemish 
type, with brown hair, and short, brownish mustache 
brushed vigorously to the side and upward, and a bit 
of a goatee. He is turned slightly toward the right, 
but looks directly at the spectator from wide-open 
blue and slightly sunken eyes. He is in dark apparel, 
with a deep shoulder-collar, lace-edged. Neutral back- 


ground. 


an SO hn bb lovedlin 
oe lta 1e7 o £eh rc y 


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@ No. 90 


Go" 
lo EGLON HENDRIK VAN DER NEER_ 


Durcu: 1643—1703 . > P 
PORTRAIT OF A YOUNG ig 
LADY AT HER TOILET 


Height, 15 inches; width, 11%4 inches 


A FAIR young woman with large eyes, pink cheeks, and 
light hair curled, is sitting at her toilet table, facing 
the right and shown to her knees. She wears a rich 
gown with puffed and slashed sleeves and white satin 
skirt, and a black kerchief is thrown about her shoul- 
ders. In the intervals of a leisurely toilet she has been & 
reading a book, from which her attention has been 9 
momentarily diverted by someone or something not . 

visible to the onlooker. An exquisite in its class. — i 


Signed on the table: E. Van der Neer, 1665. 


Purchased from Boussod, OE oS & Co., New York. x ‘ yco : 
MamchalZ Q i \ SA Ven y b yb i 


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No. 90. PORTRAIT OF A YOUNG LADY AT HER TOILET. 
By Ecton Henprik Van ver NEER, 


Seotgo Gld Lalo tbautins fom 10/6438) 262-10 
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fag UES Lo.XJa 


00" 


No. 91 


JAN WYNANTS 


Detcu: 1615—(after) 1679 


THE CLAY BANK « 
em LF Clauntin 


Height, 114% inches; length, 15%, inches 


A country road curving out of the middle distance 
comes forward past a high clay bank on the right, and 
in front of it in the foreground crosses a ford in a 
shallow stream where cattle and sheep are drinking. 
Behind the animals comes a woman on horseback who 
is accompanied by a man afoot with a dog. Up the road 
other figures are seen, and a gipsy wagon is turning 
into a field. On top of the bank is a hunter with his 
dog, and far in the distance low hills are blue. 


From the Gilmore Collection, Baltimore. 


No. 92 


DAVID TENIERS (THE YOUNGER) 


DurcH: 1610—1690 


THE APPROACHING STORM‘ 


(Panel) 7 
Height, 12%, inches; length, 1634 inches 


A gray and brown castle with several round towers 


stands on a green hill in the central middle distance, 


which commands a river winding about its base on the 
left. The sky behind it is still bright, but a heavy rain- 
storm swiftly coming in darkens the heavens on the 
left, and in the foreground clumsy peasants watch its 
approach and talk of it, a dog sharing in their observa- 
tion. On the green slope of the castle hill where sheep 
are grazing a shepherd hastens after them. 


Signed at the lower left with the artist’s monogram: D.T. 


From the Gilmore Collection, Baltimore. 


A 


. 4,\ 


No. 93 


CANALETTO (ANTONIO CANALE) 


VENETIAN: 1697—1768 44 Wis, 


CANAL, VENICE 


Height, 13°4 inches; length, 211% inches 


Numerous gondolas, conspicuous with their balda- 
chinos, spot the bluish-green water, which is mottled on 
the left by reflections from the palaces, and darkened 
somewhat on the right by shadows of the buildings on 
that shore. Besides the gondoliers some of the boats 
have passengers, and people are seen on a landing 
at the right, and in doorways. The color everywhere is 
subdued. The picture seems to be a composition made 
up. from a bend in the Grand Canal, with a dome of 
the Salute and the top of the Dogana indicated over 
the buildings on the right. 


From the Gilmore Collection, Baltimore. 


i 


| 


20" 


No. 94 


PAUL BRIL 


Beucian: 1554—1626 


LANDSCAPE WITH FIGURES 


es 
de 


(Pant) OUfy Kam, Mgonk : 


Height, 141 inches; length, 221% inches 


Trees of twisted trunks grow at right and left of the 
immediate foreground, a thick group of them on the 
right, detached ones on the left, and between them is 
the end of a pond, or an offshoot of a broad river whose 
main body continues in the middle distance and beyond. 
Just at the left a man in red and green is on one knee 
with gun aimed, about to shoot a duck on the water, 
and a boy in a red jacket hides behind a tree opposite. 
On the stream in the middle distance swans are swim- 
ming, horses, a cart and people afoot are seen in 
various roads, and a diversified landscape cut by 
streams contains houses and other buildings of Nether- 
landish architecture, and in the distance a castle on a 


hill. 


~ No. 95 


KLAAS MOLENAER 


Dourci: —1676 


SKATING IN HOLLAND : 


(Panel) 44.9 


Height, 1534 inches; length, 201%, inches 


Aut about a substantial red-brick cottage, partly gray- 
plastered and with thatched -roof, now somewhat 
whitened with snow, the water has frozen in streams 
and over fields—and the countryside is out on skates. 
Men, women and children, warmly wrapped, are en- 
joying themselves, and two horses have been brought to 
the meeting-place. Around the house leafless trees rise 
above the roofs, and at the right is the inevitable wind- 
mill. ‘The sky is gray and cold, as the day fades to 
the gloaming, and far down at the horizon there lingers 


a faint, pinkish suggestion of departed sunset. 


Signed at the lower left: K. Molenaer. 


lo" 


No. 96 


JAN VAN DE VELDE 


DurcuH: SEVENTEENTH CENTURY 


STILL LIFE—BERRIES 
AND CHERRIES 


(Panel) 


Height, 20 inches; width, 15 inches 


Acatnst a dense dark background a white shallow fluted 
dish and a piece of soft white silk are represented in 
rare quality, each respectively emphasizing and em- 
phasized by small red fruit. The dish contains wild 
strawberries, dark of hue, and on the silk lie a few 
cherries whose ruby skin is brilliant in the light, which 
falls from the left. All are on a yellow polished table. 


Signed at the right, on the table: J. Van de Velde, 1651. 


Purchased from William Macbeth, New York. 


f\7 
a No. 97 


KLAAS MOLENAER 


DoutcuH: —1676 


WINTER LANDSCAPE 
WITH FIGURES 


(Panel) nun hich 


Height, 22 inches; width, 1?%, inches 


Snow covers the ground and housetops of a Dutch land- 
scape, lightly, and small icicles depend from tree- 
branches and eaves. In the foreground an elderly 
peasant couple, well muffled, are coming slowly forward, 
walking in the roadway, and beyond them a horseman 
and an old man afoot are going in the opposite direc- 
tion, wending their slow way towards the village, where 
a high windmill and a church steeple are conspicuous 
under a cold winter sky. 


Signed at the lower right: K. Molenaer, 1657. 


From the Gilmore Collection, Baltimore. 


No. 98 


~ 


“™ CASPAR NETSCHER 


go 4 aX a DurcH: 1639—1684 


PORTRAIT OF A LADY, ,* , 
Height, 21 inches; width, 11 inches S Ulan 


Turee-quarter length portrait of a lady of ample 
proportions, with abundant blond curls, and pink 


cheeks, who is seated facing the onlooker and bestowing 
upon him a not unkindly glance. Her gown is of gray 
satin, with low corsage, and flowing elbow-sleeves edged 
with delicate white filmy material, and lightly about 
her shoulder is thrown a rich blue cloak or mantle. She 
wears pearls and holds on her lap a basket of flowers. 
Conventional background of draperies, statuary and 


: Rew : 


landscape. 


No. 98. PORTRAIT OF A LADY. 
By Caspar NETSCHER. 


- | 
yv chy 


No. 99 


GERRIT ann HIOB BERCKHEYDE 


aX DvutcH: Fu. 1638—1698 


_ CHURCH IN AMSTERDAM, 
| HOLLAND 


y (Panel) 
$o- Sihnaciller bc 
Height, 1734 inches; length, 221 inches 


A waree gray church with wide buttresses, dark slate 
roof, and square red-brick tower supporting its pointed 
steeple, extends across the canvas on the farther side 
of a green lawn. At left and right are typical Holland 
buildings with step gables, and small but flourishing 
trees in front of them, and a brick or tile walk sepa- 
rates them from the fenced-in lawn, which the walks 
surround. Within the enclosure three women are 
spreading linen on the grass to bleach, and a small 
child accompanies them. ‘The landscape is by Gerrit 
Berckheyde and the figures are by his brother Hiob. 


bo * 


No. 100 


KAREL VAN FALENS 


Bexcian: 1683?—1733 


HUNTING SCEN, 


(Panel) N Shak 


Height, 171% inches; length, 25%, inches 


Aw extensive landscape is spread before the eye, with 
mountains in the distance, green hills in front of them 
sloping down to a broad river with island castles. At 
the left of the river is a palace, projecting into the 
stream; on the nearer shore, comprising the foreground 
and right of the canvas, is a hunting party, “in at the 
death.” The hunters are great ladies and gentlemen 
accompanied by children, on horseback, and are fol- 
lowed by men on foot. They have swept down from the 
right and are closing in on a stag which the hounds 
have tired out, and are preparing to despatch him. A 
frightened shepherdess strives to gather and protect 
her sheep, fishermen quit their work to get out of the 
way, and people from the palace hasten across the 


river to be present at the finish. 


A 


\\O No. 101 | o% 


GABRIEL METSU 


DurcH: 1630—1667 


SCHOOLMASTER CHASTISING 
WaeROYEn, 


Height, 22%, inches; width, 191, inches AYO 


Tue ancient Dutch pedagogue, grim and gray, trying 
to look sorrowful, wields a baluster-ferrule on the palm 
of a sturdy boy with long, pale, curling hair, behind 
whom a dejected schoolmate awaits his turn at correc- 
tion of the corporal variety. In a corner of the room 
classmates are carrying on rather strenuous exercise 
under the observation of a young woman who stands in 
a doorway through which the village church is to be 
seen. On the walls and suspended from rafters of the 
olive-brown schoolroom interior, with leaded-glass win- 
dows, are Delft plates, and bowls and mugs, with hams 
and other carnal provender, and on a chimney-shelf is a 
bunch of quills, while at the teacher’s elbow is an hour- 
glass. The costumes are in various softened colors, 
mellowing into the brown harmony that envelops the 


whole scene. 


0° 


No. 102 


ADOLF ULRICH WERTMULLER 


SwepisaH: 1751—1811 I. buildin 
e 


PORTRAIT OF A BRIGAND 
Height, 23%, inches; width, 19 inches 


Heap and shoulders portrait of a self-satisfied, de- 
termined man, of not many years but of maturity of 
life, his figure facing the left, three-quarters front, his 
face turned directly to the front; he eyes the onlooker 
steadily from under full, slightly-drooping lids. His 
white shirt of soft material, with flowing collar, is open 
at the throat, and he wears wrapped about his shoulders 
loosely a black cloak. His dark hair is long and wavy, 
and his broad-brimmed soft black hat is placed with a 
careless confidence which accords with the not-easily- 
disturbed intentness of his facial expression. Dark 


neutral background. 


Signed at the upper right: A. Wertmuller, Suede, P— in 
Roma, 1778. 


“No. 103 


JAN BAPTIST WEENIX 


Durcu: 1621—1664 fomenboach 


PORTRAIT OF LUDOLF BACK- 
HUYSEN AND HIS DOMESTIC 


Height, 231, inches; width, 1914, inches 


Tue sitter, of portly figure, is portrayed at three- 
quarter length, seated and turned slightly toward the 
left but looking over his left shoulder at the spectator, 
with calm, penetrating glance and affable expression. 
He wears a huge brown periwig, lavender and dark- 
olive robes, the cloak having a blue lining. He leans 
with his left arm on a balcony railing, and his domestic, 
a young man, is handing him a letter. Conventional 
composite background. 


Signed at the lower left: J. Weenix, with date (very faint). 


No. 104 
A 
0° y- JUSTUS VAN HUYSUM 
\! ae (Father of Jan Van Huysum) ~ ; 


Dutcu: 1659—1716 


A BASKET OF FLOWERS 4 


Height, 1914 inches; length, 24 inches 


A wicker basket, yellowish-brown, of open weaving, 
stands on a mottled gray and brown marble pedestal, 
filled to overflowing with flowers from an old-fash- 
ioned garden. Tulips and roses, a dahlia, lilacs and 
asters, and various others, smile in the sunlight in 
blossomy profusion, against an olive and olive-yellow 


background. 


Signed at the lower right: Justus van Huysum fecit. 


No. 105 


JAN BRUEGHEL 
it O A FiemisH: 1568—1625 


? AND 
| JOHANN ROTTENHAMMER 


GeRMAN: 1564—1623 


THE KINDLY FRUITS 
OF THE EARTH 


(Panel) HU. Seaman Ajai 


Height, 1934 inches; length, 26 inches 


A sroap point of land, sunlit at the outskirts of a 
dark and thick wood, is bordered by flowering plants 
growing at the edge of a river which curves around 
it. Against the deep green background of the trees 
two allegorical female figures standing and a third 
seated, all in brilliant draperies of rose and yellow, 
green, brown and blue, are grouped about an overflow- 
ing cornucopia of pearly, rose, golden, green and rus- 
set fruits of many varieties, and hold more in arms 
and baskets, while winged amorini approach with 
further store, and amid vines on neighboring tree trunks 
gather more. In the distance at the right is a blue- 
green landscape under a sky spread with white and 
gray clouds. 


Landscape painted by Brueghel and the figures by Rotten- 
hammer. 


\9° 


A 


No. 106 


P, BALTHASAR OMMEGANCK 


Berean: 1755—1826 


LANDSCAPE WITH PEASANTS 
AND CATTLE 


(Panel) A hh te, 


Height, 1914 inches; length, 26 inches 


A scene of bucolic life in a kindly country. At a 
fountain on the left a herdsman and two stocky women 
have gathereed with cows, sheep and goats, to drink. A 
woman in an emerald skirt leans over the wide stone 
basin; another, in a yellow skirt and barefoot, has her 
head tilted back and is drinking from a jug. In the 
foreground a man leans an arm on a white and yellow 
ox, surrounded by other animals; and various people 
are moving on a bridge over a wide stream that passes 
at the right. Beyond it are gabled houses, and in the 
distance are flourishing trees on a plain and on broad 
hillsides. The light blue sun-lit sky is bestrewn with 
white fleece, tinged a pale yellow; and the tone of the 


landscape is warm. 


Signed on the fountain: P. B. Ommeganck, f. 1780, 


Purchased from C. W. Kraushaar, New York. 


ee | 


~~ ann 


f 


jo" 


No. 107 


GERARD HONTHORST 


Dutcu: 1590—1656 


v 
REFLECTION A Muth, 


(Panel) 
Height, 20 inches; length, 25 inches 


Haur-Leneru portrait of a studious young man, with 
somewhat effeminate features, intently contemplating a 
skull which lies upon a table before him, in front of an 
illuminated volume of holy writings. He is at the left 
of the canvas, facing the right, three-quarters front, 
and the light from a candle which he holds in his left 
hand, while falling upon the pages of the book and on 
the reminder of death, more strongly illuminates his 
own face. Its light is screened from the spectator 
by the student’s right hand, which it renders trans- 
lucent at the finger-tips. He is wrapped in a dark 
green robe and wears a brightly-colored headdress. 


The background is the blackness of darkness. 


5 es 


No. 108 


9,00" 


ai AW ) 


“ QUILLEM VAN AELST : 


oo" —.,4 Durex: (cirea) 1626—1683 


STILL LIFE—FLOWERS 


(Panel) Ih 


Height, 251, inches; width, 20 inches ~ 


ee 


ScaRLeT poppies with leaves and seed-pods, large pink 
roses and just-unfolding buds, with other flowers of 
varying colors, make up a tall bouquet held in a glass 
dish and standing on a balustrade or heavy table. Be- 
side the flowers is a purple coverlet with gold fringe, 
which has been pushed back, and on it lies an open watch 
to which a gold key is attached by a blue ribbon. A 
butterfly is fluttering toward the tallest poppy. _ 


Signed on the table: Guil’m van Aelst. . 


O io No. 109 
,| 


EGBERT VAN DER POEL 


Dutcu: 1621?—1664 


THE CONFLAGRATION 


(Panel) A. Vd 


Height, 2034 inches; length, 26 inches 


Tue central open space of a medieval town is pictured 
at night, when a fierce fire is raging at one end of it— 
perhaps an historical event. On the left, beyond a 
high house, rises the mass and tall spire of a Gothic 
cathedral, and beyond that the conflagration bursts 
forth. At the head of the square the yellow flames can 
be seen eating up a red dwelling, while aloft the red- 
dened clouds of smoke obscure the sky and bring out 
the delicate lines of the Gothic ornamentation of the 
cathedral spire. Across the way an important polyfoil 
building with a tall round tower is seen, and the square 
is full of people hurrying in efforts to rescue goods or 
with loot, while several lie dead; and down near the 
fire, men are shooting at each other and at a departing 


company of soldiers. 


go a 
No. 110 


ANGELICA KAUFFMANN_ . 
GrerMan-Swiss: 1741—1807 Su dtllavragen 


PORTRAIT OF CARDINAL PORTA 
Height, 26 inches; width, 201, inches 


Heap and shoulders portrait of a sturdy-looking 
middle-aged man with wavy gray-black hair, and a 
slightly nervous or startled expression in his dark brown 
eyes. He is turned towards the right but faces the 
spectator with his intent and anxious look. He is 
clad in his white-edged cardinal cloak and wears a cap 
in the same colors and an inner white fluted collar. 


Dark neutral background. 


This portrait was signed on the back by the artist. The sig- 
nature was recorded before the picture was relined; it does not 
now, of course, exist. 


3507 No. 111 


FERDINAND BOL 


Dutrcu: 1611—1680 


PORTRAIT OF A LADY “Uh, ; 


ee 


Height, 261, inches; width, 211% inches 


HaL¥-LeENGTH portrait of a brown-eyed and warm- 
colored, comfortable-looking woman of Flemish type, 
in her prime, turned toward the left, three-quarters 
front. She has a high and broad forehead and a slight 
double-chin, sensitive nostrils, and a mouth at once firm 
and forgiving, and her expression is thoughtfully pene- 
trating as she looks directly into the eyes of the ob- 
server. Her gown of rich material in dark olive hue 
hangs in loose folds, and she wears a white kerchief 
drawn tightly about her neck and shoulders, tied in a 
bow at her breast and fastened with a jeweled clasp. 
Her right hand comes into view, holding lightly a fold 
of her dress. The painting has been said to be a por- 
trait of the mother of Sir Anthony Van Dyck. 


yo” 


No. 112 


KAREL DU JARDIN 


DutcH: 1622—1678 


aoe, LE BPE rOUNT Siak 


Height, 1934 inches; length, 2934 inches 


A FOUNTAIN adorned by a sculptured group stands in 
the left foreground, at the edge of a dark wood which 
extends back to the distance along the border of a lake. 
At the fountain have gathered numerous persons, some 
younger ones indulging in endearments. Oxen are 
drinking from the basin, while more cattle and goats 
are being driven up by a heavy peasant woman, who, 
barefoot, wades after them across the shallow stream 
which flows from the fountain to the lake. On a mound 
a little back, several more persons are seated and stand- 


ing about a fire which has been built of fagots. 


yo" 
No. 118 


SALVATOR ROSA 


Iratran: 1615—1673 


PORTRAIT OF AN OLD MAN 


Sung 
A olght: 28 inches; width, 24 inches Yu. oy a 


Tue head and shoulders of an aged man of powerful 
build and indicated intellectuality, although with the 
marks of free living. He is broad-shouldered and has 
a high forehead and prominent nose, with high cheek- 
bones and knit brows, and he wears a full, bushy gray 
beard; his hair is sandy-gray. He faces the observer, 
head turned slightly toward his left shoulder, throwing 
that side of his face into transparent shadow, while a 
strong light strikes the right side of his face. The 
fiesh tones are warm and fresh, and the old man’s 
features are full of rosy color. He is turning the 
pages of a large parchment volume, and cogitating. 


Vague neutral background of brown tone. 


No. 114 


GEORGE SMITH 
(Known as SMITH OF CHICHESTER) 


EneuisH: 1714—1776 


NEAR SOUTHAMPTON, mae 472) 
.5- PLUM 


Height, 211% inches; length, 30 inches 


A capacious building with smoking red chimney and 
yellow thatch roof, very likely providing housing both 
for people and cattle, stands on the left at the edge 
of a forest whose large thick trees overshadow the fore- 
ground. Cows and sheep are assembled in front of it, a 
woman is standing in the doorway, and another woman 
and children are in conversation with the driver of a 
covered two-wheeled cart in the winding farm road which 
passes before it. Ground and foliage are green, yellow 
and brown, and varied with sunshine and shadow. In 
the distance are other buildings, fields and trees. Quite 


possibly in the environs of the New Forest. 


No. 115 


AN VAN HUYSUM 


Durcu: 1682—1749 


BASKET OF FLOWERS 


(Panel) 


Height, 301, inches; width, 214% inches 


Sranpine on a richly-colored mahogany table, a basket- 
ful of brilliant flowers are seen in a shaft of sunlight, 
against a darkened background of olive tones. ‘They 
are red and white, pink, yellow and blue, and other 
colors, and on green leaves amongst them are crystal 
drops of water, while up one long frond a large fly 
is crawling. ‘The surfaces of the petals are soft and 
delicate, and on these, too, are visible drops of the 


freshly-sprinkled water. 


Signed at the lower left: Jan Van Huysum. 


From the McKim Collection, Baltimore. 


Purchased by Dr. McKim at Amsterdam, Holland, in 1842. 


No. 116 


4,0° 
9, CASPAR NETSCHER 


DutrcH: 1639—1684 


PORTRAIT OF A LADY 


WITH A GREYHOUND . 
; z 


Height, 28 inches; width, 23 inches. 


FULL-LENGTH portrait of a large-eyed and round-faced, 
light-complexioned young lady in a fashionable pow- 
dered wig of long curls, who stands against a conven- 
tional background of dark-brown rock formations, 
facing the spectator, with her left elbow resting on a 
ledge. She wears a gown of rich blue velvet, with tight 
waist and amplitudinous skirt, the stomacher-bodice 
defined by a girdle of pearls, and other jewels at corsage 
and shoulders. The waist is broadly décolleté, edged 
with filmy white material which also forms the flowing 
elbow-sleeves. Her right hand caresses the head of 
a sleek greyhound which thrusts its slender nose affec- 
tionately against her skirt. Plants spring up at the 
foot of the rocks, and vines overhang the edges, and 
at the left a distant landscape with great trees comes 


into view. 


From the Blakeslee Galleries, New York. 


gto" 
JAN BAPTIST WEENIX 


Dutcu: 1621—1664 


STILL LIFE O blewtd 
) 


Height, 35 inches; width, 29 inches 


No. 117 


AcainsT a dense growth of trees in front of which 
poppies blossom, some dead game birds are displayed, 
fruits of the hunt, one hanging, two on the ground. 
Lying near is an ornate belt, with other objects of 
attractive surface-quality in accompaniment with the 
soft breast-feathers of the birds. A subdued light plays 
upon the group, against the dark background of the 
wood on the right, while in the distance at the left 
a landscape seen in a half-light discloses tall cypress 
trees, a pylon and a shrine. 


From the Gilmore Collection, Baltimore. 


A 


qe No. 118 


NICOLAAS PIETERSZ BERCHEM 


Dutcu: 1620—1683 


ITALIAN LANDSCAPE 


Height, 25 inches; length, 30 inches Me. Stal. 


Rocks and hills of a rugged country are pictured, and 
in the foreground a group of people and animals who 
have come to a ford in a shallow stream. ‘Two men 
are mounted—the beast of one well-laden—and a shep- 
herdess in orange, blue and white is on foot. All have 
entered the shallow water, accompanied by a white cow 
and two brown ones, and a number of sheep and goats, 
besides a dog. In the distance is a mountain which 
looks like Vesuvius. It is the sunset hour and the light 
is dim, and gray cloud-masses in the pale greenish-blue 


sky are tinged with a warm yellow. 


Signed at the lower left, in monogram: N. B. 


From the Bishop Collection, London. 


Rue 
, vy 


A cau 5 


en 


ae ~4 


if 


No. 118. 


By N 


ITALIAN LANDSCAPE. 


ICOLAAS Pirrersz BercHem. 


as 
1Y No. 119 


JAN DAVIDSZ DE HEEM 


Durcu: 1606—1683 (84) 


STILL LIFE—FRUIT , 
Height, 3114 inches; length, 39 inches bb Meow 


GOLDEN pears and a ripe red apple are grouped in a 
blue and white dish on a brown carved table. At hand 
are opened and uncracked nuts, and glasses of sparkling 
beverages. To the right, where the walnut wood is 
covered by a rich green fabric with gold fringe, lies a 
luscious peach, near a tall, brilliant glass cup of ruby 
wine and a basket of lustrous grapes overlain by a stem 
of their ample leaves. Veiled or screened light on the 
group; dark neutral background. 


From the Gilmore Collection, Baltimore. 


No. 120 


A 
9° 


J. CORNELISZ DROOGSLOOT 


Durcu: 1616—1660 


THE BEGGARS’ INN 


Height, 28 inches; length, 411, inches do. Mial, 


Beccary speaks loud and high from the sign of the 
old brown gabled inn with green roof which stands at 
the left of the picture, hard against a thick wood. The. 
sign, carried on a mended pole on which an old garment 
is knotted, projecting from an upper window, consists 
of crossed crutches tied with a handy kerchief or 
bandage-cloth, hanging suspended with a bag and 
basket high against the sky. In front of the inn, below, 
a parcel of hardy mendicants who have been putting 
their provender and the inn’s to the profit of the inner 
system have developed a quarrel, and menace each other 
with knife and stick. Beyond, on the right, are rolling 
green fields of common land, bordered by trees and 
houses, and about them people are strolling, uncon- 


cerned. 


Signed at the lower left, on a wall: Droogsloot, with a date 
not readily decipherable. 


vo" 


DAVID TENIERS (THE YOUNGER) 


Dutcu: 1610—1690 A : 


No. 121 


INTERIOR OF THE ARCHDUK 
LEOPOLD’S GALLERY 


Height, 30%, inches; length, 3734 inches 


One wall of a picture gallery with high, vaulted ceiling, 
is presented before the spectator, exhibiting more than 
a score of canvases, among them being portraits by 
Van Dyck and others, landscapes, still life paintings, 
group pictures, and scenes of Bacchic merriment and 
amorous dalliance. In front of them the Archduke 
Leopold and his mentor are seated in converse, their 
costumes displaying colors of pale buff, vermilion, 
pearl-white, black, brown, and ermine, and before the 
great man and his companion an artist is at work on 
a landscape canvas which rests on an easel. The artist 
has turned from his work and looks at the beholder, his 


attitude all action and professional pose. 


From the Governor Aiken estate, Aiken, S. C. 


No. 122 


4 
49° HENDRIK MARTENSZ ZORG ) 


DutcnH: 1611—1670 


KITCHEN INTERIOR » 


(Panel) J Uf | Mano 7 


Height, 31 inches; length, 4314 inches 


A capacious, seventeenth century Dutch kitchen, with 
shadowy recesses, avd a busy corner brought to view 
in a mellow light. Here are assembled vegetables and 
fruits, and sundry utensils, a heterogeny of edibles and 
articles of service, from carrots to cabbages, and from 
stone and copper jugs to a meat-axe. A demure 
mddchen in pink, yellow, green, brown and white is 
seated, peeling some of the store, and through a door 
back of her a man is entering with further additions 
to the supply; the whole homely composition in quiet 
tones, with brilliant surface and affectionate treatment. 


Signed at the lower left on a barrel: M. Zorg. 


From the McDonald Collection, Baltimore. 
Formerly in the Meade Estate Collection, Philadelphia. 


No. 122. KITCHEN INTERIOR. 
By Henvrik Marrensz Zorc. 


a No. 123 
Co 
} J. CORNELISZ DROOGSLOOT 


Durcu: 1616—1660 
THE VILLAGE FESTIVAL 
Height, 31%, inches; length, 4534 inches 


Tatu and shorter gabled houses with thatch as well as 
tile roofs stand on either side of a village common 
through which a highroad winds, and trees detached or 
in groups overtop the buildings. The open place is 
peopled with a merry peasant company in medieval 
revels, who have come afoot and in vehicles and con- 
gregate about an inn on one side and a religious spec- 
tacle or morality play on the other. The lame and 
halt, the old and the young, appareled in a prodigality 
of color, betake themselves to serious or frivolous amuse- 
ment with equal purpose, or disport themselves amor- 
ously in bucolic innocence, and unabashed. The day is 
fair, with silver-gray and fleecy white clouds in a robin’s- 
egg sky, the atmosphere is soft and mollifying, and the 


colors are time-chastened and social. 


From the Gilmore Collection, Baltimore. 


No. 124 iy i 


(IL BORGOGNONE) 


Ivartan: 1621—1676 


ww BATTLE Sy Sigh 


Height, 32 inches; length, 4534, inches 


60 A GIACOMO CORTESE 


Unper a partly demolished fortress on the left, from 
whose ramparts men are still fighting, a terrific hand- 
to-hand conflict is going on between horsemen and foot 
soldiers who are mingled in a tangled heap of men and 
horses, the living and the victims of the struggle. A 
riderless horse is escaping. A river cuts the landscape, 
and on the farther side of it are other forces, fighting 
in front of an important building with a high square 
tower; and still other warriors are seen in and crossing 
the water. The sky is a turmoil of brown, blazing yel- 
low, mauve and dark-green cloud effects. 


Signed at the lower right, on a silenced cannon: Cortese. 


From the Augustus Albert Collection, Baltimore. 


48 A ver 


CANALETTO (ANTONIO CANALE) 


VENETIAN: 1697—1768 ~ 


rience oh Sarnare Apeuk 


Height, 29 inches; length, 49 inches 


Tue spectator looks straight from the Molo to the 
Clock Tower, between St. Theodore on the crocodile 
and the Winged Lion. The canal facade of the 
Libreria on the left is in sunshine, the beautiful face 
on the Piazzetta in deep shadow, and the building 
throws a transparent shadow almost to the arcade of 
the Ducal Palace on the right. The palace, church, 
Clock Tower and Campanile, and the part of the Piazza 
that can be seen, all are in bright sunlight. Something 
going on in the Piazzetta has attracted a large circle 
of men to observe it, and men, women and ecclesiastics 
are seen singly and in groups in various places. The 
sky is a clear, greenish-blue, with white cloud-banks 


coming up over the Adriatic. 


From the Governor Aiken Collection, Aiken, South Carolina. 


\\e 


A 


No. 126 


GIUSEPPI RIBERA (LO SPAGNO- 
LETTO) 


SpaNniIsH anp NEAPOLITAN: 1588—1652 


THE MARKET VENDOR 


Ih. deal 


Height, 351% inches; length, 481, inches 


A BROWN-SKINNED Spaniard, smooth-shaven and 
wrinkled—though with no great burden of years—with 
hardy breast exposed by his loosened drab-white blouse, 
seen at three-quarter length, faces the spectator and 
offers for barter his produce of succulent melons. One, 
cut, he holds in his left arm, with the excised tranche 
upraised in his extended right hand to tempt the thirsty 
and anhungered, its yellow pulp and seeds juicily ex- 
posed. To right and left of him are other melons, 
with corrugated surface undisturbed, their ripe yellow 
skins tinged in a pale olive tone. He wears a dull-red 
and loose leather belt, and a pliant hat of plaited straw 


rakishly poised. 
Signed on the handle of the knife. 


From the Gilmore Collection, Baltimore. 


t, 


4,0 “ No. 127 


MELCHIOR HONDECOETER 
DoutcH: 1636—1695 


BIRDS AND FOWL 


Mo. 


Height, 3734, inches; length, 5134 inches 


Part ty in the sunlight and partly in the shade of trees, an 
assemblage of birds and chickens is depicted. A crested, 
proud and noisy white hen is seated in the foreground, 
small chicks perched on her back, nestling under her 
wing, and pecking on the ground around her. Beyond 
her are other fowl of varying colors. On the left, on 
the ground and in the air, are game and other birds 
of brilliant plumage, and in a distant landscape classic 
buildings are seen. In a green-blue sky masses of 
white clouds are tinged in warm sunset tones. 


Signed at the lower left: M. Hondecoeter. 


Purchased from William Macbeth, New York. 


p 


po” No. 128 


PHILIP DE KONINCK 


DurcH: 1619—1688 


BIRD’S-EYE VIEW IN HOLLAND : 


' Height, 48 inches; length, 54 inches J luilin 


Ancient Holland in epitome is displayed on a broad 
and high canvas, in sunshine and shadow, land and sea. 
On a stream in the foreground are small boats of sail 
and man power with various people in them. “Two swans 
are swimming near by and people look on from the 
shore. At right and left on higher planes, venerable 
woods of bushy trees shadow the land, and people are 
walking or resting; one person, approaching, carries 
a headload. In the middle distance in a valley is a 
city of low, gabled buildings, with others with high 
towers and arches, and on a hill is a castle, while on 
a river there are more sailing boats; and the lowlands 
beyond reveal windmills and more settlements. Beyond 
all is the distant sea, under a blue sky varied by many 
light gray and dark clouds. 


J es 


No. 128, BIRD’S-EYE VIEW IN HOLLAND. 
By Putte pe Konincr, 


\O S No. 129 


LUDOLF BACKHUYSEN 


Durcu: 1631—1708 


NAVAL PARADE 
BEFORE AMSTERDAM 


Height, 36%, inches; length, 51 inches bY. Yhoow 


In a choppy sea a single-masted gunboat with a full 
complement of Hollanders is coming on in the right 
foreground, a huge lee-board flopping on the weather 
side and a small-boat trailing. The sunlight strikes 
her gray-white and orange canvas and illumines her 
officers and crew. Beyond her in cloud-shadows are 
large men-o’-war with sails full and flags and pennants 
streaming. The sky is filled with rolling masses of dark 
clouds with light edges; in the left foreground is a 
round harbor-buoy; and far off, beyond careening 
smaller sailboats, is the low coastline of the land of 


windmills and dikes. 


From the Gilmore Coilection, Baltimore. 


No. 1380 


s JAKOB JORDAENS 


Bexueran: 1593—1678 


Oo 
\ PORTRAIT GROUP—THE STOIC AND 
THE EPICURE (Dividing the World) 


I 
Height, 44% inches; width, 441/, inches SF bla 


Two ropust men, painted with characteristic vigor 
and warm color, are depicted at three-quarter length 
against a dark background of neutral brownish tone, 
a globe before them. One, on the right, his figure three- 
quarters to the left but his head turned to face front, 
is an old man bald on the crown but with plenty of 
hair back of the temples and a full gray beard. He is 
nude to the waist, a cloak thrown over one shoulder, 
and rests his head on his right hand, chin against chest, 
in an attitude of philosophic and analytical contem- 
plative thought. Leaning on his right shoulder and 
talking earnestly to him is a vigorous man of the world, 
with gray tousled hair and ruddy complexion, wearing 
rich robes of green-blue, brown and golden yellow. 
With one hand on the elder’s shoulder, he extends the 
other hand in front of him, in emphasis of declamation ; 
and he smiles, with a smile of confidence and conviction 
that life as he lives it is good. 
A similar painting is in the Metropolitan Museum of Art, New 
York, the older man being quite the same, and the globe being 


utilized; the other man appears in different aspect. Its title 
is “The Philosophers”; catalogue number, 43. 


From the Dr, Morris Collection, Baltimore. 


=| 


No. 130. PORTRAIT GROUP—THE STOIC AND 
THE EPICURE (Dividing the World). 
By Jaxos JORDAENS. 


BAPTIST WEENIX 


\ 


NX 


\ 


No. 131 


JAN BAPTIST WEENIX 


0) As V ben oe Durcn: 1621—1664 
. STILL LIFE AND LANDSCAPE 


0% Height, 58 inches; width, 51 inches 


A paintine big and comprehensive, with a wealth of 
color, rich but subdued, a brilliant display of technic, 
and enriched with imaginative and romantic elements. 
In the foreground a low stone parapet crosses the can- 
vas, surmounted at the left by a huge sculptured 
column. On the ledges of this, white and red grapes 
in large bunches are grouped with peaches and purple 
and golden plums, an oak branch with green and 
partly-dried leaves crossing over the group. At the end 
of the branch a white-breasted red squirrel on the para- 
pet is attacking it for acorns. On the ground or ter- 
race below is a profusion of cut flowers and leaves, a 
butterfly fluttering over them, which has caught the 
attention of a small curly-haired white dog standing 
near; and at one side is a ripe cantaloupe, from which 
a wedge has been cut. Beyond the parapet is a basin 
or canal in a noble garden, surrounded by buildings of 
classical architecture amongst which tall Italian cypress 
trees are seen. On the water there are people in pleas- 
ure boats, and also white swans; and other persons are 


standing in a portico at the water’s edge. 
Signed at the right, midway: J. Weenix, 1701. 


From the Gilmore Collection, Baltimore. 


Purchased by Mr. Gilmore in 1823 from the Chevalier Apostool, 
at Amsterdam, who was the Director of the Museum there. 


yp 


at 


Soa a seas , se : = 
SS Re BRIBES fo) ANS con ae 


No. 131. STILL LIFE AND LANDSCAPE. 
By Jan Bapristr WEENIX. 


5 
<< 
biz . 


. 


: va No. 182 


FRANS SNYDERS 


oe 
60° Bereran: 1579—1657 
fk, DOGS ATTACKING A STAG . 
we” Height, 56 inches; length, 76 inches Yo dilluager 


Tue pack—eight dogs visible—have been pursuing a 
stag across a rolling country of grassy meadows and 
tall, thick trees, running to the left, and in the fore- 
ground have overtaken and pounced upon him. He has 
caught one dog on his antlers and tossed it over his 
head, and one dog which has fallen on its back under 
him has seized his leg in its teeth. Just as he has 
cleared his horn from the tossed dog one of the others, 
leaping to his shoulder, has bitten his ear and holds on, 
while others attack from front and rear and more are 


seen coming up at full run. 


“A glorious picture in perfect preservation and untouched by a 
strange hand. 

“No mere words can describe the magnificent vitality of this 
picture, the expressiveness and sentiment and the impeccable 
execution of which must rank it among the masterpieces of the 
artist. It is immeasurably superior to the fine Snyders in the 
Dureal Collection, which is now owned in Boston.”—The late 
AuFrepD Trumsie, in The Collector. 


From the collection of the King of Naples and of Spain, Joseph 
Bonaparte. Formerly hung in the National Gallery, Madrid. 
Presented to Jerome Bonaparte as a wedding gift. 


0 
Th 


A 
No. 133 


ALDERT VAN EVERDINGEN 


DutcH: 1621?—1675 


SNOW IN THE NORSE MOUNTAINS 


Auth 


Height, 49 inches; length, 68 inches 


WINTER is come in the Northland but sleighs are not 
out nor is water frozen. Snow whitens the tall moun- 
tains which on the right loom high in the background, 
their peaks and slopes lessening and receding toward 
the left, and is sifted in a powder-like coating over tall 
evergreens and on the windward side of trees which have 
long since shed their leaves. Large buildings are 
perched high on the slopes. In the foreground is a 
humble home and inn, hollowed out in the face of a 
sheer cliff and fronted with a wooden lean-to. Here are 
seen some peasant maids and children, a man playing a 
bagpipe, and another man on horseback drinking. A 
caléche and two persons walking are proceeding up a 
road, and at the side of the inn cattle and sheep are 


drinking at a pool in a mountain stream. 


From the McGuire Collection, Howard County, Maryland. 


4 


‘NOONIGUIAG NVA Lagaty Ag 
‘SNIVINOQOW HSUON HHI NI MONS ‘8&8 ‘ON 


No. 134 


q Se FRANS SNYDERS 
Lt Brrctan: 1579—1657 
“THE KING IS DEAD— 
2 0” LONG LIVE THE KING!’ , 
\p Height, 72 inches; width, 60 inches o. Ue YWtlw 


One of the artist’s favorite pictures, as broadly humor- 
ous in subject as serious in painting. In the central 
foreground is the stout brown stump of a blasted tree, 
with a few small branches still sustaining a leaf-stem 
here and there, and in the background are green fields 
and many flourishing trees. Around the stump and 
perched on its scraggly branches are birds of the 
ground and birds of the air, all with beaks open, sing- 
ing or chattering to the top of their bent. Yellow- 
breasts and red-breasts, parrots and peacocks, a big 
white rooster and a little speckled hen, a gobbler and 
a crow, and small chickens two of which strut in fight- 
ing spirit and glare at each other, all share in the re- 
joicing; while, perched on a parchment proclamation 
spiked at the top of the stump, an owl oversees the 
proceedings. 


From the Gilmore Collection, Baltimore. 


(Illustrated—see Frontispiece) 


AMERICAN ART ASSOCIATION, 


MAnaAGERs. 
THOMAS E. KIRBY, 


AUCTIONEER. 


LIST OF ARTISTS REPRESENTED 
AND THEIR WORKS 


ARTISTS REPRESENTED 
AND THEIR WORKS 


ARMFIELD, GEORGE: English. 


40—LanpscaPre with Does Catcuine A Hare. 


BACKHUYSEN, LUDOLF: Dutch; born 1631; died 
1708. 


129—Navat PARADE BEFOKE AMSTERDAM. 


BERCHEM, NICOLAAS PIETERSZ: Dutch; born 
1620; died 1683. 


%6—Tue Fortune Teer. 
118—Iratian LANDSCAPE. 


BERCKHEY DE, GERRIT anv HIOB: Dutch; flour- 
ished 1638 to 1698. 


99—CuurcH In AmsTERDAM, Hoxuuanp. 


BERNE-BELLECOUR, E. P.: French; born 1838; 
died 1910. 


19—TuHeE SENTINEL. 
35—En SELLE. 
36—Lr CHEMIN LE PLUS COURT. 


BIERSTADT, ALBERT: American; born 1830; died 
1902. 


$2—YosEMITE VALLEY, CALIFORNIA. 


BOL, FERDINAND: Dutch; born 1611; died 1680. 


111—Porrrair or a Lapy 


BONHEUR, MLLE. ROSA: French; born 1822; died 
1899. 


28—Wixp Boar. 


BRIDGMAN, FREDERICK A.: American; born 1847. 


55—STREET IN CONSTANTINE. 


BRIL, PAUL: Belgian; born 1554; died 1626. 


94—LANDSCAPE WITH FIGURES. 


BROWN, J. G.: American; born 1831; died 1913. 
43—‘CLevER Doe!’ 
46—GetTTING ACQUAINTED. 


BRUEGHEL, JAN: Flemish; born 1568; died 1625; 
and ROTTENHAMMER, JOHANN: Ger- 
man; born 1564; died 1623. 


105—Tue Kinpty Fruits oF tHe Earth. 


CANALETTO (ANTONIO CANALE): Venetian; 
born 1697; died 1768. 


93—CanaL, VENICE. 
125—VENICE. 


CHAIGNEAU, FERDINAND: French; born 1830. 


Y—SHEEP AND SHEPHERD. 
48—SHEEP AND HaAysTACKs. 


COLE, THOMAS: American; born 1801; died 1848. 


61—Carski1tt Mowunrarns. 


CONSTABLE, JOHN: English; born 1776; died 1837. 


4—Nor¥FoLtk LANDSCAPE. 
94_LANDSCAPE WITH Doc Cuasine Ducks. 
50—Hamesteap Heatu. ( Attributed.) 


CORTESE, GIACOMO (IL BORGOGNONE): 
Italian; born 1621; died 1676. 


124—In Batrtte. 


COURBET, GUSTAVE: French; born 1819; died 
1878. 


16—Oup Mitt. 


DEARMAN, J.: English; died 1856. 


1—Ruvrawt LAnpscarPe. 


DE CAUWER, EMIL: Belgian; born 1828; died 1873. 


18—InTeERiIorn OF A CATHEDRAL. 


DE. HAAS, M. F. H.: Dutch-American; born 1832; 
died 1895. 


57—Oup Fort anp Beacu at Friusuine, Hor- 
LAND. 


DE HEEM, JAN DAVIDSZ: Dutch; born 1606; died 
1683(84). 


119—Sritt Lire: Fruit. 


DE KONINCK, PHILIP: Dutch; born 1619; died 
1688. 


128—Birp’s-EYE View 1n Howuanp. 


DIAZ DE LA PENA, N. V.: French; born 1808; died 
1876. 


10—Poou anp LANDSCAPE. 
14—Forest or FontTAINEBLEAU. 


DIETRICH, ADELAIDE: Contemporary. 


5—Stitt Lire: FLrowers. 


DOUGHTY, THOMAS: American; born 1793; died 
1856. 


41—Laxe GrorGE. 


DROOGSLOOT, J. CORNELISZ: Dutch; born 1616; 
died 1660. 


120—Tue Becears’ Inn. 
123—TxHer Vittace FEsTIvat. 


DU JARDIN, KAREL: Dutch; born 1622; died 1678. 


112—AtT tHe Founrarn. 


ELSHEIMER, ADAM: German; 1578?; died 1620. 


66—ConFLAGRATION: THE Burnine or Troy. 


GERICAULT, J. L. A. THEODORE: French; born 
1791; died 1824. 


15—BatTrLe SCENE. 


HARNETT, WILLIAM M.: American; born 1851. 


3—Smoxer’s Den. 


HART, WILLIAM: American; born 1823; died 1894. 


51—LanpscaPE AND Cows. 


HENRY, EDWARD L.: American; born 1841. 


23—Leravinc Home. 
389—Nearine Home. 


HERRING, JOHN FREDERICK: English; born 
1795; died 1865. 


11—A Grovr or ANIMALS. 


HONDECOETER, MELCHIOR: Dutch; born 1636; 
died 1695. 


127—Birps anp Fowt. 


HONDIUS, ABRAHAM: Dutch; born 1638; died 
1695. 


“7—Curist Breaxinc Breap at Emmaus. 


HONTHORST, GERARD: Dutch; born 1590; died 
1656. 


107—REFLECTION. 


HOREMANS, JAN JOZEF (THE YOUNGER): 
Belgian; born 1714; died (after) 1790. 


85—ArtTIisT’s STuDIO. 


INNESS, GEORGE: American; born 1825; died 1894. 


62—Tue Juntata River NEAR Harrissure, 
PENNSYLVANIA. 


JOHNSON, DAVID: American; born 1827; died 1908. 


17—ScEne 1n Livineston County, New York. 
26—Ropcers Super, Laxe Georce. 


JONES, H. BOLTON: American; born 1848. 


31—LANDSCAPE. 


JORDAENS, JAKOB: Benn born 1598; died 1678. 


70O—Maponna AND- CHILD. 
130—Porrtrair Group: THe Stoic AND THE 
Epicure (Dividing the World). 


KAUFFMANN, ANGELICA: German-Swiss; born 
1741; died 1807. 


110—Porrrait or CarpiInaL Porra. 


KEITH, WILLIAM: American; born 1839; died 1911. 


33—TueE Op San FRANCISCO Mission. 


KOEKKOEK, BAREND CORNELIS:- Dutch; born 
1803; died 1862. 


9—SKATING In HoLuanp. 
21—MarIne. 
44—THer SHEPHERDESS. 


LANCE, GEORGE: British; born 1802; died 1864. 
20—Stitt Lire. 


LAUERS, T. T.: Dutch. 


79—PortrRAiT oF AN ACTOR. 


MAGRATH, WILLIAM: American; contemporary. 


30—“‘ComeE to Your Danppy.” 


MARIS, WILLEM: Dutch; born 1844; died 1910. 


S—CHICKENS. 


METSU, GABRIEL: Dutch; born 1630; died 1667. 


101—ScuooumastTER CHAstisinc A Boy. 


MICHEL, GEORGES: French; born 1763; died 1843. 


53—W oopcHOPPERS. 
58—A Srorm. 


MIGNARD, PIERRE: French; born 1610; died 1695; 
and SEGHERS, DANIEL: Flemish; born 
1590; died 1661. 


83—PorrTrait or A Lapy. 


MOLENAER, KLAAS: Dutch; died 1676. 


88—SKATING. 
95—SxatTine In Houuanp. 
97—WintTerR LAnpscAPE wITH Ficures. 


MORLAND, GEORGE: English; born 1763; died 
1804. 


$8—Tue Ovv Wuarire Horse. 
45—SHEEP AND CHILDREN. 
54—Tue Vittace Pump. 


NEEFFS, PIETER (THE YOUNGER): Belgian; 
born 1601; died 1675. 


87—InTERIOR OF ANTWERP CATHEDRAL. 


NETSCHER, CASPAR: Dutch; born 1639; died 1684. 


98—PortTrRAIT oF A Lapy. 
116—Porrrair or a Lapy wirH A GREYHOUND. 


NOTERMAN, EMANUEL: Belgian; born 1808; died 
1863. 


92—-MonxkeEys Puayine witH Dice. 


OMMEGANCK, P. BALTHASAR: Belgian; born 
1755; died 1826. 


106—LANDSCAPE WITH PEASANTS AND CATTLE. 


PAIL, EDOUARD: French. 


59—FrErpING THE CHICKENS. 


PARTON, ARTHUR: American; born 1842. 


37—Cows 1n A CREEK. 


POELENBURG, CORNELISZ VAN: Dutch; born 
1586; died 1667. 


78—Diana, Catyrpso AND OTHERS. 


POTTER, PAULUS: Dutch; born 1625; died 1654. 


72—LANDSCAPE AND Otp Wuitrt Horse. 


QUARTLEY, ARTHUR: American; born 1839; died 
1886. 


2—LAnDSCAPE. 
QY%—LANDSCAPE. 


RIBERA, GIUSEPPI (LO SPAGNOLETTO) : Span- 
ish and Neapolitan; born 1588; died 1652. 


126—Tue Market Venpor. 


RICHARDS, WILLIAM TROST: American; born 
1833; died 1905. 


$4—Marine: Misty WEATHER. 
52—ScENE ON THE New Encuanp Coast. 


ROMNEY, GEORGE: English; born 1734; died 1802. 


60—Porvtrair or Lorp Byron. 


ROOS, PHILIPP PETER: German; born 1655; died 
1705. 


81—LaAnpDscAPE wiTH FicurREs AND CATTLE. 
86—LANDSCAPE WITH CATTLE. 


ROSA, SALVATOR: Italian; born 1615; died 1673. 


113—Porrtrair oF AN Otp Man. 


ROTTENHAMMER, JOHANN: See under Brut- 


GHEL. 
RUBENS, (SCHOOL OF) 


89—Portrair oF A Man. 


SCHWEICKHART, HENRY. 


84—LanpDscAaPE wiTH FIGURES. 
SEGHERS, DANIEL: See under Mienarp. 
SIEBOLD, CHRISTIAN: Austrian; eighteenth cen- 


tury. 


29—PortTRAIT OF THE ARTIST BY HIMSELF, 


SMITH, GEORGE (xnown as SMITH OF CHI- 
CHESTER): English; born 1714; died 
1776. 


114—Near SouTrHAmpTon, ENGLAND. 


SNYDERS, FRANS: Belgian; born 1579; died 1657. 


1382—Docs ATTACKING A STAG. 
1384—“Tue Kine 1s Derapn—Lone Live THE 
Kine!” 


SULLY, THOMAS: American; born 1783; died 1872. 


56—Porrtrait oF Georce Wasuineton (After 
Charles Wilson Peale). 


TENIERS, DAVID (THE YOUNGER): Dutch; 
born 1610; died 1690. 


68—Monkeys: A Satrre on THE ENGLISH 
Navy. 

74—Porrrair OF THE ARTIsST’S FATHER. 

92—THe APPROACHING STORM. 

121—Inrerion OF THE ARCHDUKE LEOPOLD’s 
GALLERY. 


THAULOW, FRITZ: Norwegian; born 1847; died 
1906. 


47—Tuer Mitt Stream 1x WINTER. 


TOORNVLIET, JACOB: Dutch; born 1641; died 
1719. 


64—PorrTrRaAlItT OF A GIRL. 
71—Porrrait or A FIsHERWOMAN. 


UNKNOWN CONTEMPORARY ARTIST. 


49—Sir JosHvua REYNOLDs. 


VAN AELST, GUILLEM: Dutch; born (circa) 1626; 
died 1683. 


108—StitL Lire: FLowers. 


VAN DER NEER, AART: Dutch; born 1603; died 
. 1677. 


75—River Scene in Moon.icur. 


VAN DER NEER, EGLON HENDRIK: Dutch; 
born 1643; died 1708. 


90—Portrair or A Youne Lapy aT HER 
ToImLet. 


VAN DER POEL, EGBERT: Dutch; born 1621?; 
died 1664. 


109—TuHEr CoNnFLAGRATION. 


VAN DE VELDE, WILLEM: Dutch; seventeenth cen- 
tury. 


80—DutcH Fisutne Boars. 
96—Stitt Lire: Berries AND CHERRIES. 


VAN EVERDINGEN, ALDERT: Dutch; born 1621?; 
died 1675. 


1383—Snow 1n THE Norse Mountains. 


VAN FALENS, KAREL: Belgian; born 1683?; died 
1733. 


100—Huntine ScENE. 


VAN GOYEN, JAN: Dutch; born 1596; died 1656. 
65—Tue Bruivecr. 


VAN HUYSUM, JAN: Dutch; born 1682; died 1749. 


115—Basxet or FLoOwERs. 


VAN HUYSUM, JUSTUS: Dutch; born 1659; died 
L716: 


104—A Basket or FLowers. 


VAN LIL, T.: Dutch. 


73—Eacie Devourine a Birp. 


VAN OSTADE, ADRIAEN: Dutch; born 1610; died 
1685. 


6%7—Man Smoktne. 


VERBOECKHOVEN, EUGENE: JOSEPH: Belgian ; 
born 1799; died 1881. 


25—AtT THE Barn Door. 


WEENIX, JAN BAPTIST: Dutch; born 1621; died 
1664. : 
103—Porrrait or Lupotr BackHuysEN AND 
His DomEsTICc. 


117—Srit Lire, 
131—Stitt Lire anp LAnpscaPpr. 


WERTMULLER, ADOLF ULRICH: Swedish; born 
1751; died 1811. 


102—PorTrAIT OF A BriGAnp. 


WILLAERTS, ADAM: Dutch; born 1577; died 1664. 
69—Marine. 


WILSON, RICHARD: English; born 1713; died 1782. 


42—Virw or THE Lake, AtBano, ITAty. 


WOUWERMAN, PHILIPS: Dutch; born 1619; died 
1668. 


82—HawkIne Parry. 


WYNANTS, JAN: Dutch; born 1615; died (after) 
1679. 


91—Tue Cray Bank. 


ZIEM, FELIX: French; born 1821; died 1905. 
6—Venice. 


ZIMMERMAN, R. S.: Contemporary. 


12—Tue Puitosorpuer: A Porrrait. 
18—Tue Connoisseur: A Portrait. 


ZORG, HENDRIK MARTENSZ: Dutch; born 1611; 
died 1670. 


63—Drinxrine Parry. 
122—Kitrcuen Interior. 


bul - 
77 - 
Yo - 
qq- 


108—- 


Seber aeeare 
Pike sae rar earn 


ies el, 
Beas rie Ruy atte 
= 


